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Vol. VI, No. XVII Thursday, <strong>April</strong> <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong>,,,,$1.00<br />

<strong>Westchester</strong>’s Most Influential Weekly<br />

WPPD Officer Hart Calls Him<br />

“Nigger!”<br />

SHERIF AWAD<br />

Go Nagai, Go!<br />

Page 4<br />

LARRY M. ELKIN<br />

Con Ed Delivers<br />

Fiscal Abuse<br />

Page 8<br />

ROBERT SCOTT<br />

From Rugs to Riches<br />

Page 10<br />

RAYMOND IBRAHIM<br />

Muslim Persecution<br />

of Christians<br />

Page 12<br />

JOHN SIMON<br />

Mixed-Up Bag<br />

Page 18<br />

WPPD Officer Carelli<br />

Shoots<br />

U.S. Marine Kenneth Chamberlain, Sr.<br />

Dead<br />

WWW.WESTCHESTERGUARDIAN.COM<br />

MARY C. MARVIN<br />

Savoring Spring<br />

Page 20<br />

PEGGY GODFREY<br />

MOU Approved<br />

Page 21<br />

EDWARD I. KOCH<br />

Time to Reexamine<br />

Welfare Reform Law<br />

Page 23


Of<br />

Of Significance<br />

Significance<br />

Community Section ...............................................................................4<br />

Community Section................................................................................3<br />

Business ................................................................................................4<br />

...............................................................................4<br />

Calendar................................................................................................3<br />

Business Calendar ................................................................................................4<br />

...............................................................................................4<br />

Cultural Calendar Perspective............................................................................4<br />

Charity ..................................................................................................5<br />

...............................................................................................4<br />

Eldercare................................................................................................8<br />

Charity Creative Contest ..................................................................................................5<br />

..................................................................................................6<br />

Disruption ............................................................................5<br />

Finance...................................................................................................8<br />

Contest Cultural Creative ..................................................................................................6<br />

Perspective Disruption ............................................................................6<br />

...........................................................................7<br />

Health.....................................................................................................9<br />

Creative Energy Education Issues Disruption .............................................................................................7<br />

.......................................................................................8<br />

............................................................................6<br />

History.................................................................................................10<br />

Education In Fashion Memoriam ..................................................................................................8<br />

.............................................................................................7<br />

....................................................................................10<br />

In Fashion Medicine Memoriam.....................................................................................11<br />

Fitness....................................................................................................9<br />

..................................................................................................8<br />

.............................................................................................10<br />

Media...................................................................................................12<br />

Najah’s Fitness....................................................................................................9<br />

Health ..................................................................................................10<br />

Corner ...................................................................................11<br />

Police Health Movie Investigation............................................................................13<br />

History<br />

Review ..................................................................................................10<br />

................................................................................................10<br />

....................................................................................12<br />

Writers History Music<br />

Ed Koch<br />

...................................................................................................12<br />

Collection.............................................................................14<br />

................................................................................................10<br />

Books....................................................................................................16<br />

Movie Review ...................................................................12<br />

Ed Community<br />

Spoof Koch ....................................................................................................13<br />

Movie ........................................................................................13<br />

Review ...................................................................12<br />

<strong>The</strong> Spoof Writers Spoof.............................................................................................18<br />

Sports ....................................................................................................13<br />

Scene<br />

Collection.............................................................................14<br />

Eye<br />

.......................................................................................13<br />

Books Sports On<br />

Najah’s<br />

...................................................................................................16<br />

Scene <strong>The</strong>atre...................................................................................18<br />

Corner .......................................................................................13<br />

Government<br />

...................................................................................13<br />

People Najah’s Writers<br />

..................................................................................................18<br />

Corner Section.............................................................................19<br />

Collection.............................................................................14<br />

...................................................................................13<br />

Albany Eye Writers Books<br />

On Correspondent.....................................................................19<br />

...................................................................................................16<br />

<strong>The</strong>atre Collection.............................................................................14<br />

..................................................................................18<br />

Mayor Books Leaving<br />

Transportation ...................................................................................................16<br />

Marvin....................................................................................20<br />

on a Jet<br />

...................................................................................17<br />

Plane ......................................................................19<br />

Government Campaign<br />

Government Transportation Trail...................................................................................20<br />

Section<br />

Section ...................................................................................17<br />

............................................................................20<br />

............................................................................17<br />

Government Economic Campaign Development...................................................................21<br />

Albany Correspondent<br />

Trail Section ..................................................................................20<br />

............................................................................17<br />

Labor....................................................................................................21<br />

....................................................................17<br />

Albany Economic<br />

Mayor Marvin’s Correspondent Development<br />

Column ....................................................................17<br />

..................................................................20<br />

Legislation...........................................................................................22<br />

.................................................................18<br />

Mayor Education<br />

Government Marvin’s ...........................................................................................21<br />

.......................................................................................19<br />

Column .................................................................18<br />

Media...................................................................................................22<br />

OpEd Government <strong>The</strong> Hezitorial<br />

Section .........................................................................................23<br />

.......................................................................................19<br />

....................................................................................21<br />

OpEd OpEd Legal Section..........................................................................................22<br />

Koch ....................................................................................................23<br />

Commentary.....................................................................23<br />

.........................................................................................23<br />

Letter Ed People<br />

Letters Koch to ..................................................................................................24<br />

the<br />

to Commentary.....................................................................23<br />

Editor............................................................................22<br />

Ed the Editor ..........................................................................24<br />

Letters Strategy Koch<br />

Weir Only to ...............................................................................................24<br />

Commentary.....................................................................23<br />

the Human Editor ............................................................................25<br />

..........................................................................24<br />

OpEd New<br />

Legal Weir Section York Only Civic..................................................................................<strong>26</strong><br />

Human .........................................................................................25<br />

..........................................................................................<strong>26</strong><br />

............................................................................25<br />

Legal Notices...........................................................................................25<br />

..........................................................................................<strong>26</strong><br />

..........................................................................................27<br />

<strong>Westchester</strong>’s Most Influential Weekly<br />

<strong>Westchester</strong>’s Most Influential Weekly<br />

<strong>Guardian</strong> News Corp.<br />

<strong>Guardian</strong> News Corp.<br />

P.O. Box 8<br />

P.O. Box New Rochelle, New York 10801<br />

New Rochelle, New York 10801<br />

Sam Zherka , Publisher & President<br />

Sam Zherka Publisher President<br />

publisher@westchesterguardian.com<br />

publisher@westchesterguardian.com<br />

Hezi Aris, Editor-in-Chief & Vice President<br />

Hezi Aris, Editor-in-Chief Vice President<br />

whyteditor@gmail.com<br />

whyteditor@gmail.com<br />

Advertising: (914) 562-0834<br />

Advertising: (914) 562-0834<br />

News and Photos: (914) 562-0834<br />

News and Photos: (914) 562-0834<br />

Fax: (914) 633-0806<br />

Fax: (914) 633-0806<br />

Published online every Monday<br />

Published online every Monday<br />

Print <strong>edition</strong> distributed Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday<br />

Print <strong>edition</strong> distributed Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday<br />

Graphic Design: Watterson Studios, Inc.<br />

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www.wattersonstudios.com<br />

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westchesterguardian.com<br />

westchesterguardian.com<br />

RADIO<br />

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<strong>Westchester</strong> On the Level is usually heard from heard Monday from Monday to Friday, to Friday, from 10 from a.m. 10 a.m. to 12<br />

to Noon 12 Noon on the on Internet: the Internet: http://www.BlogTalkRadio.com/<strong>Westchester</strong>OntheLevel.<br />

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allegations, programming with be suspended for the days of March <strong>26</strong> to 29, <strong>2012</strong>. Yon-<br />

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Tuesday, or Tuesday, Narog <strong>April</strong> March and 24Hezi th , co-hosts <strong>26</strong> or Aris 27. are Richard Should your that Narog co-hosts. be and the In Hezi case, the we Aris week will will beginning resume focus our February regular 20th and ending on<br />

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Tune do it?<br />

the preventive in and find measure out. one may incorporate into their lifestyle with regard to colon health and the best<br />

Tune in and find out.<br />

Co-hosts conduct if Richard one is diagnosed Narog and with Hezi colorectal Aris will cancer. relish the dissection of all things politics on Tuesday, February<br />

Co-hosts 21st. Yonkers Richard City Narog Council and President Hezi Aris Chuck will relish Lesnick the dissection will share of his all things perspective politics from on Tuesday, the august February inner<br />

21st. sanctum Yonkers of the City City Council President Chambers Chuck on Wednesday, Lesnick will February share 22nd. his perspective Stephen Cerrato, from the Esq., august will inner share<br />

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For those who cannot join us live, consider listening to the show by way of an MP3 download, or on<br />

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Mission<br />

Mission<br />

Statement<br />

Statement<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Westchester</strong> <strong>Guardian</strong> is a weekly newspaper devoted to the unbiased reporting of events<br />

<strong>The</strong> and developments <strong>Westchester</strong> <strong>Guardian</strong> that are newsworthy is weekly newspaper and significant devoted to <strong>read</strong>ers to the living unbiased in, and/or reporting employed of events in,<br />

and <strong>Westchester</strong> developments County. that <strong>The</strong> are <strong>Guardian</strong> newsworthy will and strive significant to report to fairly, <strong>read</strong>ers and living objectively, in, and/or reliable employed information<br />

<strong>The</strong> without <strong>Guardian</strong> favor will or strive compromise. to report fairly, Our first and duty objectively, will be to reliable the PEOPLE’S informa-<br />

in,<br />

<strong>Westchester</strong> County.<br />

tion RIGHT without TO favor KNOW, or compromise. by the exposure Our of first truth, duty without will be fear to the or PEOPLE’S hesitation,<br />

RIGHT no matter TO where KNOW, the pursuit by the may exposure lead, in of the truth, finest without tradition fear of or FREEDOM hesitation,<br />

no matter OF THE where PRESS. the pursuit may lead, in the finest tradition of FREEDOM<br />

OF THE PRESS.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Guardian</strong> will cover news and events relevant to residents and<br />

businesses <strong>The</strong> <strong>Guardian</strong> all over will cover <strong>Westchester</strong> news and County. events As relevant a weekly, to residents rather than and<br />

focusing businesses on all the over immediacy <strong>Westchester</strong> of delivery County. more As associated weekly, rather with daily than<br />

journals, focusing we on will the instead immediacy seek of to delivery provide the more broader, associated more with comprehensive,<br />

daily<br />

journals, we<br />

chronological<br />

will instead<br />

step-by-step<br />

seek to provide<br />

accounting<br />

the broader,<br />

of events,<br />

more<br />

enlightened<br />

comprehensive,<br />

with analysis,<br />

chronological<br />

where appropriate.<br />

step-by-step accounting of events, enlightened<br />

with analysis, where appropriate.<br />

Professional Dominican<br />

Hairstylists From & amongst Nail Technicians journalism’s classic key-words: who, what, when,<br />

From amongst journalism’s classic key-words: who, what, when,<br />

Hair Cuts where, • Styling why, • Wash and & Set • how, Permingthe why and how will drive our pursuit. We<br />

Pedicure • Acrylic Nails • Fill where, Ins • Silk why, Wraps • and Nail Art how, Designs the why and how will drive our pursuit. We<br />

Highights • Coloring • Extensions will use • Manicure our • more Eyebrow abundant Waxing time, and our resources, to get past the<br />

initial<br />

will use<br />

‘spin’<br />

our<br />

and<br />

more<br />

‘damage<br />

abundant<br />

control’<br />

time,<br />

often<br />

and our<br />

characteristic<br />

resources, to<br />

of<br />

get<br />

immediate<br />

past the<br />

initial<br />

news releases,<br />

‘spin’ and<br />

to<br />

‘damage<br />

reach the<br />

control’<br />

very heart<br />

often<br />

of the<br />

characteristic<br />

matter: the<br />

of<br />

truth.<br />

immediate<br />

We will<br />

news<br />

take our<br />

releases,<br />

<strong>read</strong>ers<br />

to<br />

to<br />

reach<br />

a point<br />

the<br />

of<br />

very<br />

understanding<br />

heart of the matter:<br />

and insight<br />

the truth.<br />

which<br />

We<br />

cannot<br />

will<br />

take<br />

be obtained<br />

our <strong>read</strong>ers<br />

elsewhere.<br />

to point of understanding and insight which cannot<br />

be obtained elsewhere.<br />

To succeed, we must recognize from the outset that bigger is not necessarily<br />

To succeed,<br />

better.<br />

we<br />

And,<br />

must<br />

furthermore,<br />

recognize from<br />

we will<br />

the<br />

acknowledge<br />

outset that bigger<br />

that we<br />

is not<br />

cannot<br />

necessarily<br />

be<br />

all things<br />

better.<br />

to all<br />

And,<br />

<strong>read</strong>ers.<br />

furthermore,<br />

We must<br />

we<br />

carefully<br />

will acknowledge<br />

balance the<br />

that<br />

presentation<br />

we cannot be<br />

of<br />

all things to all <strong>read</strong>ers. We must carefully balance the presentation of<br />

relevant, hard-hitting, <strong>Westchester</strong> news and commentary, with features<br />

relevant, hard-hitting, <strong>Westchester</strong> news and commentary, with features<br />

and columns useful in daily living and employment in, and around, the<br />

and columns useful in daily living and employment in, and around, the<br />

county. We must stay trim and flexible if we are to succeed.<br />

county. We must stay trim and flexible if we are to succeed.<br />

Yudi’s Salon 610 Main St, New Rochelle, NY 10801 914.633.7600<br />

Prime Location, Yorktown Heights<br />

1,000 Sq. Ft.: $1800. Contact Wilca: 914.632.1230<br />

Prime Retail - <strong>Westchester</strong> County<br />

Best Location in Yorktown Heights<br />

1100 Sq. Ft. Store $3100; 1<strong>26</strong>6 Sq. Ft. store $2800 and 450 Sq. Ft.<br />

THE WESTcHESTER GUARDiAn<br />

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Store $1200.<br />

Page 3<br />

Page 2 THE WESTcHESTER THE WESTCHESTER GUARDiAn<br />

GUARDIAN THURSDAY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL 23, <strong>2012</strong> Suitable <strong>26</strong>, 29, <strong>2012</strong> for any type of business. Contact Wilca: 914.632.1230<br />

Page 3<br />

HELP WANTED<br />

A non profit Performing Arts Center is seeking two job positions- 1) Director<br />

of Development- FT-must have a background in development or experience<br />

fundraising, knowledge of what development entails and experience<br />

working with sponsors/donors; 2) Operations Manager- must have a<br />

good knowledge of computers/software/ticketing systems, duties include<br />

overseeing all box office, concessions, movie staffing, day of show lobby<br />

staffing such as Merchandise seller, bar sales. Must be familiar with POS<br />

system and willing to organize concessions. Full time plus hours. Call (203)


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 3<br />

CommunitySection<br />

Enrico Fermi Educational Fund to Hold<br />

49th Annual Breakfast<br />

YONKERS, NY – <strong>The</strong> Enrico Fermi Educational<br />

Fund of Yonkers has scheduled their Fortyninth<br />

Annual Breakfast on Sunday, May 6, <strong>2012</strong>,<br />

at 9:30 a.m., in honor of this year’s scholarship recipients<br />

with keynote speaker, Chazz Palminteri,<br />

respected author, actor and director.<br />

<strong>The</strong> breakfast will be held at the <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

Manor, located at 140 Saw Mill River Road, in<br />

Hastings-On-Hudson, NY.<br />

Learn more by calling Anthony Maddalena<br />

at (914) 968-5644; RSVP by mailing a list of<br />

guests and $30.00 per person, with payment<br />

made in favor of Enrico Fermi Educational Fund,<br />

Inc.<br />

Mail to Enrico Fermi Educational Fund, c/o Anthony<br />

Maddalena, 13 Ann Marie Place, Yonkers,<br />

NY 10703.<br />

News & Notes from Northern <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

By MARK JEFFERS<br />

Tax day has come and gone, so<br />

if the government has taken all<br />

your money, you can still enjoy<br />

this complimentary copy of this<br />

week’s, “News and Notes…”<br />

<strong>The</strong> celebration of Earth<br />

Day may be over, but shouldn’t<br />

every day be Earth Day?<br />

“Branch Out,” is a tree planting program initiated<br />

and funded by the Bedford Garden Club to celebrate<br />

100 years of civic commitment to Bedford.<br />

Over the last few years the town of Bedford has lost<br />

hundreds of street trees to storms, old age, salt runoff<br />

and removal by utility companies. <strong>The</strong> centuryold<br />

maple, sycamore and oaks lining our beautiful<br />

roads give Bedford its historic rural character. <strong>The</strong>ir<br />

mission is to plant the next generation of these trees,<br />

one tree at a time with your help. In partnership with<br />

all of us, their goal is to plant 2020 trees by the year<br />

2020.<br />

Check out the Phillis Warden’s Garden in Bedford<br />

on June 3 rd , July 1 st and July 9 th . We were going<br />

to show off our garden, but my wife says we need to<br />

plant one first…<br />

Here is an outing that should make you feel<br />

warm and fuzzy… Stone Barns Center for Agriculture<br />

welcomes the community during their annual<br />

Sheep Shearing Festival on Saturday <strong>April</strong> 28 th from<br />

10am to 3pm at Stone Barns, in Tarrytown… watch,<br />

as farmers shear wool from their flock of Finn-Dorset<br />

sheep, enjoy wool and weaving activities geared<br />

for the entire family, and take a tour of the farm.<br />

Our friends at the Katonah Art Center have<br />

announced registration is now open for their spring<br />

and summer camps, give them a call at 914-232-<br />

4843 for details.<br />

Catherine Zeta-Jones, (need I say more!) will be<br />

the honorary chairwoman for an exclusive shopping<br />

event at Churchill’s in Mount Kisco on May 10 th<br />

with proceeds going to the Max Cure Foundation,<br />

which benefits pediatric cancer research.<br />

Congratulations to Fox Lane Middle School<br />

teacher Erin Filner who was recently presented with<br />

the Susan J. Goldberg Memorial Teacher Award for<br />

her work as a human rights educator.<br />

Barnes and Noble will “close the book” on its<br />

store in Greenbugh at the end of <strong>April</strong>.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Friends of the Beford Hills Free Library<br />

will be collecting books on May 5th at the library for<br />

their annual used book sale.<br />

Lots of chuckles are in store on May 15 th at<br />

the Jacob Burns Film Center in Pleasantville as the<br />

Center presents an “Evening with Steve Guttenberg,”<br />

who starred in some of the biggest blockbusters<br />

of the 1980’s, “Police Academy,” “Short Circuit,”<br />

“Cocoon,” and “Three Men and a Baby,” but his meteoric<br />

rise began in 1982, with a role in Barry Levinson’s<br />

first feature film, “Diner.” This ensemble piece<br />

helped launch the careers of several other film marquee<br />

mainstays of that era, Mickey Rourke, Kevin<br />

Bacon, and Ellen Barkin. Guttenberg will join Janet<br />

Maslin after a screening of “Diner” to discuss his new<br />

memoir, “<strong>The</strong> Guttenberg Bible,” which hilariously<br />

details the highs and lows of his career.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Performing Arts Center at Purchase College<br />

presents the Martha Graham Dance Company<br />

on May 5 th .<br />

You can donate your car today to the Purple<br />

Heart Foundation, they have been helping wounded<br />

warriors and their families every day since 1957….<br />

Call 1-888-696-5907 for more information.<br />

Arts<strong>Westchester</strong> in White Plains presents<br />

“Sculpture: On and Off the Wall” through May 20 th .<br />

<strong>The</strong> exhibit will feature twenty of the area’s scultptors.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Pound Ridge Library as part of its “Meet<br />

the Artist” series, will have David Markowitz, flutist<br />

and friends perform in a Chamber music concert on<br />

<strong>April</strong> 29 th .<br />

Everyone’s favorite pediatrician, Dr. Pete Richel,<br />

a Katonah local, will be visiting Little Joe’s Books in<br />

Katonah informing and entertaining on the benefits<br />

of proper nutrition keeping kids happy and healthy<br />

with his “Mission Nutrition.” Come see Dr. Pete on<br />

Saturday, <strong>April</strong> 28 th from 11am to 12 Noon.<br />

Spring-cleaning is an action event in our house,<br />

as my wife donates most of my clothes to as many<br />

local charities as she can find which is really great! So,<br />

if I can save something to wear we will see you next<br />

week.<br />

Mark Jeffers successfully spearheaded the launch of<br />

MAR$AR Sports & Entertainment LLC in 2008. As<br />

president he has seen rapid growth of the company with<br />

the signing of numerous clients. He resides in Bedford<br />

Hills, New York, with his wife Sarah, and three daughters,<br />

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Page 4 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

CALENDAR<br />

Books Without Borders<br />

<strong>The</strong> publishers who are attending will have<br />

the benefit of networking with authors, agents<br />

and distributors. It is our belief that the publishing<br />

industry, now embroiled in the turmoil of<br />

eBooks vs. print and online book sales, will have<br />


<br />


 By DENNIS SHEEHAN<br />

writers who will mentor them, enabling the new<br />

Everyone 
Dennis
Sheehan
resides
in
<strong>Westchester</strong>
with
his
wife,
four
children
and
four
<br />

should be able to writer to learn from experience and hone their<br />

follow grandchildren.
He
has
traveled
extensively
and
has
worked
in
China,
Russia
and
<br />

their dreams. We hope craft. World-renowned authors publishers<br />

that Books Without Borders, will be offering seminars, which are open to attend<br />

by the public, as well as authors who want<br />

an event<br />

South
America
and
Africa.
His
first
novel
Purchased
Power
has
been
a
huge
<br />

to be held on June<br />

9 th , from success
and
his
second
thriller;
Green
to
Red
will
be
out
soon.
He
is
a
regular
<br />

10am to 4 pm the to better their writing skills.<br />

Yonkers guest
on
<strong>Westchester</strong>
on
the
Level
with
Hezi
Aris.
<br />

waterfront, will enable <strong>The</strong> literary agents who will attend will<br />

all to achieve that goal.<br />

also mentor the new and unpublished authors<br />


<br />

Parents will find books for their children through a series of workshops, which will be<br />


 that will stimulate their imagination and guide held throughout the day’s many events. Agents<br />


 them onto a path towards a solid learning process.<br />

Our hope is that parents will pass on their and the guidance they will offer is invaluable to<br />

are an important part of the publishing industry<br />


Nancy
B.
Brewer
is
an
award
winning
author,
storyteller
and
poetess.

She
is
<br />

love for books and the written word to those a budding author. <strong>The</strong> “Great American Novel”<br />

children who will use the known
for
her
soft
southern
style
and
passion
for
weaving
historically
accurate
<br />

knowledge obtained is only thoughts put to paper until it is published.<br />

<strong>The</strong> literary agent plays an important role<br />

to make this world, one stories,
such
as:
"Carolina
Rain"
and
"Beyond
Sandy
Ridge"
<br />

of marvel, progress and<br />

wonderment.<br />

in making that happen. <strong>The</strong> role of the literary<br />


<br />

<strong>The</strong> world of the writer is often one of agent has morphed into one of editorial guidance,<br />

support and proper placement. A book will<br />

solitude, hard work and 
 frustration. This event is<br />


 geared toward helping young and new authors only be published if it is first worthy and then<br />

achieve their dream of being published. It will brought to the right publisher. It is one of the selections to the public at lower costs.<br />


As
a
detective,
in
the
UK,
Paul
Anthony
served
with
Cumbria
CID,
the
Regional
<br />

be an atmosphere of camaraderie, friendship most difficult hurdles for an author to overcome,<br />

and learning. It will give the Crime
Squad
in
Manchester,
the
Special
Branch,
the
anti‐terrorist
branch
and
<br />

new author an opportunity<br />

to meet and work other
national
agencies
in
London
and
elsewhere.
He
uses
his
personal
<br />

with more seasoned agent, an author can realize their dream.<br />

but with the professional guidance of the literary<br />

experiences
to
write
fiction
regarding
crime
thrillers,
murder
mystery,
<br />

CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE<br />

espionage,
terrorism,
political
intrigue
and
the
interplay
of
human
<br />

relationships.
<br />

Go Nagai, 
 Go!<br />

Dargaud,<br />


<br />

By SHERIF AWAD<br />


<br />

Comic magazines had<br />

major Magdalena
Capurso
is
an
Art
representative
for
international
portraitist
<br />

influence on many<br />

generations Kenneth
Hari.
Influenced
by
Shakespeare,
Lord
Byron,
Blake,
Rilke,
she
is
<br />

throughout<br />

the 20th Century until today<br />

although parents have<br />

working
on
a
collection
of
poems
that
reflect
upon
nature
and
spirituality.
 characters<br />

sometimes Magdalena
resides
in
NYC.
<br />

tried to prevent<br />

their 
 children from <strong>read</strong>ing<br />

them,<br />


<br />

hoping their children<br />

would focus on their schoolwork instead.<br />

Monthly published by DC 
 and Marvel, American<br />

comics, like “Superman” 
 and “Spiderman,”<br />

reflected American sociopolitical<br />

Stephen
Woodfin
is
an
attorney/author
who
has
written
five
legal
<br />

ideologies--<br />

the superiority of the American superhero over<br />

all others, while establishing thrillers.

He
blogs
on
Venture
Galleries
<br />

its image as world<br />

savior. In Europe, in the aftermath of WWII,<br />

American<br />

(http://venturegalleries.com/author/stephenwoodfin
)
<br />

Mazinger Z and his pilot, Koji Kabuto.<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />

a great venue to discuss these concerns with others<br />

in the industry and develop strategies to allow<br />

all aspects of publishing to coexist and prosper.<br />

<strong>The</strong> public relations benefits of this event are a<br />

solid investment in the future sales of whatever<br />

medium they chose.<br />

Books Without Borders will also be attended<br />

by book distributors, who not only deliver<br />

books to your favorite book store, they also offer<br />

marketing and sales programs for authors. Many<br />

authors are now unaware of these programs and<br />

their benefits but will have the opportunity to<br />

meet the distributors and gain some knowledge<br />

of what is available to make their books a success.<br />

<strong>The</strong> distributors will also be giving your librarians<br />

some insight on how to save money and<br />

allow them to offer more comprehensive book<br />

<strong>The</strong> public will have the opportunity to<br />

meet their favorite authors and possibly discover<br />

new ones. It will be a festive atmosphere,<br />


At
30,
I
had
a
massive
stroke.
18
months
later,
I
returned
to
work
as
a
<br />

policeman.
My
career
ended
after
a
2nd
stroke
so
I
took
up
painting.
Now,
<br />

after
a
3rd
stroke,
I
write!
<br />

Belgium gave rise to<br />

publishing houses like<br />

Lombard<br />

and Casterman and<br />

weekly magazines like<br />

“Tintin” and “Spirou”<br />

that featured more realistic,<br />

down to earth<br />

influenced<br />

by western culture and<br />

movies. It was called<br />

cinema sur papier (Cinema<br />

on Papers) with<br />

still viable characters<br />

like XIII (a secret agent<br />

inspired by the Bourne<br />

Identity” novels, recently<br />

adapted as a series for<br />

with a lot going on. <strong>The</strong>re will be music, clowns<br />

and face painters for the kids, or the young at<br />

heart. <strong>The</strong>re could not be a more beautiful setting<br />

for this event, than the Yonkers waterfront.<br />

Set along the majestic Hudson River with cool<br />

summer breezes and breath-taking views. We<br />

will enjoy meeting the authors and booksellers<br />

in this casual and pleasant atmosphere.<br />

Everyone should take the opportunity to<br />

visit the booksellers in the Riverfront Library<br />

Atrium. Take some time and discover the true<br />

value of your local bookstore. You might be surprised<br />

at the b<strong>read</strong>th of knowledge the bookshop<br />

owners truly have. Strike up a friendship<br />

and open the door to a wonderful world of<br />

books, right in your neighborhood.<br />

Books bring us knowledge, as well as allow,<br />

us to escape to anywhere our imaginations might<br />

take us. <strong>The</strong>y allow us to discover, learn and enjoy.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y offer a world of knowledge in a way<br />

more intimate and comfortable than any other<br />

medium. Books allow us to use the words in<br />

that small book to expand our horizons further<br />

than we ever dreamed possible. Books Without<br />

Borders celebrates that wonder as it allows us to<br />

enjoy books in still another way.<br />

networks),<br />

“Ric Hochet” (a contemporary<br />

Sherlock Holmes), and the American<br />

cowboy, “Lucky Luke.”<br />

In the Far East, comics took another, completely<br />

different turn to reflect ancient culture<br />

and heritage, as well as the dreams and aims of<br />

that part of the world. Japan Animation (Anime)<br />

started way back in the 1930s. It was thereafter<br />

it fused with another Japanese art form called<br />

Manga (Japanese Comics) in order to address<br />

the public, young and old, with coherent plotlines.<br />

In the 1950s, the leading figure in Japanese<br />

Manga was Tedzua Osamu whose work was<br />

later transferred to TV with the series Astro Boy<br />

in 1963 that caused a great boom in animation.<br />

One of the Manga artists who later grabbed attention<br />

was Go Nagai who produced great, diverse<br />

and unconventional work that found great<br />

success not only in Japan, but found his notoriety<br />

sp<strong>read</strong> throughout the Western world, reaching<br />

Egypt and eventually, the rest of the Middle<br />

East. Born Kiyoshi Nagai on September 6, 1945<br />

(about a month after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima),<br />

he was influenced by many Japanese<br />

artists including Tedzua Osamu.<br />

Nagai accidentally decided to pursue an artistic<br />

career when he fell sick for several weeks<br />

during his teen years and was falsely diagnosed<br />

with Colorectal Cancer. Expecting that he<br />

might die, the young Nagai went to draw some<br />

Manga characters to leave a physical trace of<br />

himself with the world. When he was cured,<br />

Nagai would recognize that Manga and Animation<br />

were his destiny. Nagai was the first artist<br />

to unify the relationship between Man and Robot,<br />

creating what’s known as Mecha (Robots<br />

controlled by a Pilot) even before the release of<br />

Continued on page 5


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 5<br />

CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE<br />

Go Nagai, Go!<br />

Continued from page 4<br />

Go Nagai in his studio.<br />

Steven Spielberg’s A.I. (2001) which introduced<br />

us to this term. As a result of great acclaim and<br />

popularity, Nagai’s Robots, like Mazinger and<br />

Grendizer, were to become recognized recognized<br />

throughout the world. In time, pushing<br />

in similar fashion other Japanese Anime film<br />

and series created by other artists to great successes<br />

like Spirited Away and Pokeman and even<br />

creating feature film adaptations such as Crying<br />

Freeman, Transformers and Blood: <strong>The</strong> Last Vampire.<br />

While making an appearance in a French<br />

event dedicated to Animation, Go Nagai was<br />

addressed by a lady attendee of Arab ancestry<br />

who spoke to the popularity of his TV series<br />

Mazinger and Grendizer in Arab countries. Astonished<br />

by this information, Nagai who never<br />

knew that his work was also dubbed in Arabic,<br />

decided to make an Arab tour of lectures and<br />

workshops for young animators in Jordan, Syria,<br />

Dubai, and Egypt. His lecture in the Creativity<br />

Center at the Cairo Opera House attracted<br />

hundreds of fans who were first to be afforded<br />

a sneak preview of the new Shin-Mazinger series,<br />

a retelling of his classic creation Mazinger<br />

Z. With a Japanese translator, I succeeded to<br />

make this conversation with Nagai, asking him<br />

questions I have had since I was a kid watching<br />

Grendizer and Mazinger on my 8mm projector.<br />

AWAD: I want to ask you about your first<br />

drawings when you were a child. Were they affected<br />

by any childhood experience in the aftermath<br />

of Hiroshima? We remember that Count<br />

Brocken, one of Dr. Hell’s officers, (Mazinger’s<br />

nemesis) was an ex-Nazi.<br />

NAGAI: I have been asked the same question<br />

about Dr. Hell several times, specifically here<br />

<strong>The</strong> villains: <strong>The</strong> beheaded Count Brocken, the half-woman / half-man Baron Ashura, and their leader<br />

Dr. Hell<br />

in the Middle East, but I’d like to point out that<br />

Dr. Hell is not symbolic of a Germanic background.<br />

I would never associate the “bad guy” to<br />

a particular nation, because it would be unfair to<br />

the people of that country. I mean, we have al<strong>read</strong>y<br />

seen many Hollywood movies where the<br />

bad guys were sometimes Russians, sometimes<br />

Arabs, and I don’t really think this has helped in<br />

sp<strong>read</strong>ing understanding between cultures.<br />

Having said this, the war experience surely<br />

affected my whole childhood and the formation<br />

of my personality. Even though I have<br />

not experienced any bombing or fighting, all<br />

the adults around me kept telling me horrible<br />

stories about the war, so I grew up with a feeling<br />

of strong rejection against it, as well as the<br />

conscience that my works should have delivered<br />

Continued on page 6<br />

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Page 6 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE<br />

Go Nagai, Go!<br />

Continued from page 5<br />

a message of peace. That is also why I was particularly<br />

saddened when I found that in many<br />

countries I was considered an author who loves<br />

to depict battles and destruction just for the fun<br />

of it. Nothing could be more different from my<br />

real stance. <strong>The</strong> reason why I depict the effects of<br />

the war in my comics is because I strongly believe<br />

that a person should learn, since his childhood,<br />

how much war can be destructive and<br />

how much people and societies may suffer from<br />

it; just the same way I learned it from the stories<br />

of adults around me when I was a little child. I<br />

mean, if we raise a child telling him only the nice<br />

and happy things of life, he will be unable to cope<br />

with all the hardships he will inevitably meet in<br />

his adulthood; and if he doesn’t know the devastating<br />

affects of violence and repression, he could<br />

allow them to recur in ignorance of them and<br />

cause incredible damage and sufferaing among<br />

the people around him. I guess this is one of the<br />

reasons why Japanese people, who have been<br />

raised during the last sixty years <strong>read</strong>ing comics<br />

that some people abroad have labeled as “hyperviolent,”<br />

chose to be involved in no war after<br />

1945, and have stated on their very Constitution<br />

that they renounce war. Juxtaposed to such an<br />

upbringing, a country like the U.S., where there<br />

is strong censorship against violence in animation<br />

and programs for children, has been at war<br />

for most of his recent history. Also, Japan enjoys<br />

one of the lowest crime rates in the world, totally<br />

opposite to the U.S. This proves how violence in<br />

animation is not related at all with violent behavior<br />

in real life.<br />

Definitely, I do believe that the influence<br />

of the war has affected the contents of my stories<br />

and my personality as a whole, much more<br />

than affecting my drawing style. Portraying wars<br />

between good and evil must eventually teach us<br />

about peace.<br />

AWAD: How did the characters of Mazinger<br />

and Grendizer come into shape in your<br />

imagination?<br />

NAGAI: Having <strong>read</strong> and watched many<br />

Manga in my younger years, my first inspiration<br />

was the series Astro Boy about a robot in<br />

the shape of a young child (1963) by our master<br />

Osamu Tezuka and the series Gigantor (Tetsujin<br />

28-go, 1964) about a remote-controlled robot by<br />

our master Mitsuteru Yokoyama. Five years after<br />

I decided to work as a professional Manga artist.<br />

My challenge was to create my own robot stories<br />

without imitating those two masters and their<br />

work of creation. One day, I was driving along<br />

the streets of Tokyo in the middle of a traffic jam<br />

where all drivers were sharing a common feeling<br />

of anger because they could not move at all. An<br />

then it hit me, an idea clicked and I started to<br />

imagine that my car generated arms and legs to<br />

surpass all the other cars with man controlling it<br />

like a car from a space inside his head. I returned<br />

to my studio and started to draw and design the<br />

first prototypes for Mazinger, three times bigger<br />

than humans with its conductor Koji Kabuto<br />

riding a flying saucer that settled down on its<br />

forehead. After six months of its first publishing<br />

as a Manga, Mazinger was acquired by TV producers<br />

to become a successful and popular series<br />

of 92 animated episodes that ran from 1972 to<br />

1974. I think that one of the reasons for which<br />

young children loved Mazinger and Grendizer<br />

is that they gave them the imagination of growing<br />

up very fast and accomplishing astonishing<br />

things.<br />

AWAD: Do the names of your characters<br />

have certain significance from Japanese culture?<br />

NAGAI: In Japanese language, Mazi<br />

Mazinger Z, Great Mazinger and Grendizer.<br />

means magical supernatural powers like those<br />

described in One Thousand and One Nights. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

are inspirations from other mythologies, too; Dr.<br />

Hells’ robots were made of ruins of pre-Greek<br />

titans on an island similar to Rhodes. Because I<br />

favored non-Japanese films, namely American<br />

and French, I chose a universal non-Japanese<br />

look for the characters although they were Japanese.<br />

It is also easier to show facial reactions on<br />

the aesthetics of such characters. Moreover, their<br />

names reflected what they do: In Japanese, Koji<br />

means a samurai’s helmet. When I came to<br />

Egypt, I noticed Egyptian looks similar to Koji<br />

and Daisuke (laugh).<br />

AWAD: In your more adult work, you introduced<br />

sensuality into Manga and Anime.<br />

Later on, it acquired a cult status worldwide. Can<br />

you elaborate on this topic and also on the rise<br />

of graphic violence and erotica in Manga and<br />

Anime?<br />

NAGAI: This is another difficult question. I<br />

know that many Manga works are often labeled<br />

as “erotica” in non-Japanese cultures, but once<br />

again, we must keep in mind some peculiarities<br />

of my country’s culture. In Japan we believe<br />

that “nudity” and “erotica” are two totally different<br />

things. <strong>The</strong> Japanese people have no problem<br />

with the first issue: as you probably know,<br />

in Japan we have a lot of hot springs and public<br />

baths, and we love them. In such places, we have<br />

no shame getting completely naked in front<br />

of people we don’t even know; before the war,<br />

which means before western culture was largely<br />

imposed over the Japanese population, it was<br />

normal for men and women to get completely<br />

naked and share the same hot spring or public<br />

bath with complete strangers. In other words, for<br />

centuries Japanese people felt totally comfortable<br />

and normal being seen in the nude by strangers<br />

of the other sex, and even today, it is normal to<br />

be seen in the nude in the company of strangers<br />

of the same sex, because nudity is considered a<br />

Grendizer and his pilot, Duke Fleed.<br />

natural state of the human being. I know that it<br />

can sound a bit peculiar to non-Japanese, but I<br />

guess different societies have different attitudes<br />

toward particular aspects of the human body.<br />

For instance, in China they would not share this<br />

Japanese view of nudity as natural, yet their public<br />

toilets are not separated by walls, and people<br />

would line up together and chat with each other<br />

while defecating. Even if for the rest of the world<br />

this sounds extremely strange, for Chinese culture<br />

it is normal, just the same way that nudity is<br />

normal for Japanese culture.<br />

So, some of my comics deal with nudity,<br />

but it must be considered under the point of<br />

view I have described: they are a product of my<br />

Japanese culture and targeted to Japanese people<br />

who share the same culture and perspective, and<br />

I would never dare to diffuse them or, worse, try<br />

to impose them onto cultures who have a totally<br />

different point of view of nudity. I know that in<br />

such cultures, which usually do not distinguish<br />

between “nudity” and “erotica,” they would be labeled<br />

as “erotica,”, but this would be a total misunderstanding<br />

of their intended essence.<br />

Of course this doesn’t mean that in Japanese<br />

arts, including comics targeted to adult audiences,<br />

there isn’t a wide market of erotica, as there<br />

is in most countries of the West and of East<br />

Asia; it is also true that more and more, Japanese<br />

publishers try to impose erotic elements in<br />

normal comics, even when they’re targeted to<br />

young <strong>read</strong>ers, hoping that such elements would<br />

help the comics to sell more. I do not agree with<br />

this policy of inserting erotic elements in stories<br />

where there is no need for them, because I<br />

strongly believe that an author should always be<br />

totally free to develop his story without having<br />

any restricions imposed by a publisher; but at the<br />

same time, it is also true that at the basis of Japanese<br />

culture there is the concept that any and every<br />

person is free to choose what he or she wants<br />

to watch or <strong>read</strong>. <strong>The</strong>re is an incredible variety<br />

of genres in Japanese comics, including erotica,<br />

but at the very end, it is only the <strong>read</strong>er, upon his<br />

own responsibility, who chooses what he wants<br />

to watch and buy and to decree the success or<br />

failure of a comic book.<br />

AWAD: In the same context, you have introduced<br />

the duality of the villainous masculine<br />

/ feminine characters like Baron Ashura. I want<br />

to know what inspired you to create such neo-<br />

Frankenstein creatures and if you are inclined to<br />

explore these creations in more adult work.<br />

NAGAI: <strong>The</strong> idea of Ashura, the dual masculine<br />

/ feminine character, actually springs out<br />

of an intuition which has nothing to do with<br />

sexuality and has much to do with psychology.<br />

Ashura represents the average Japanese worker<br />

(but probably not only Japanese) who finds himself<br />

at the very middle of the structure of a company:<br />

he has a team of workers who obey thim,<br />

but he also has a boss to whom he has to report.<br />

I found it very funny to see people like these,<br />

who are very harsh and abusive to their staff, but<br />

when they are in front of their bosses they are<br />

completely subdued. That is why in the comic I<br />

drew, when Ashura speaks to Dr. Hell, he always<br />

uses his female ego and he’s very remissive, but<br />

when he gives orders to his staff he uses his male<br />

voice and loves to be rough and cruel!<br />

AWAD: You have also explored Machine<br />

/ Human fusion in both Grendizer and Mazinger<br />

Sagas. Many other filmmakers, like David<br />

Cronenberg explored similar topics; namely in<br />

his classic films like Crash (Man vs. Cars), Videodrome<br />

(Man vs. TV) and Existenz (Man vs.<br />

Virtuosity). What do you think of this adult<br />

approach to this fusion, especially since Mr<br />

Cronenberg is a fan of non-Japanese films?<br />

NAGAI: Mr. Cronenberg explores the<br />

theme of fusion between man and machine in<br />

a very philosophical and complex way, but my<br />

concept is far simpler. My robots are machines,<br />

but when the pilot gets inside them, they become<br />

his flesh and blood: when a robot is hit,<br />

the pilot will feel the pain, too; when the pilot<br />

cries, the robot will shed tears, too. In comparison<br />

with Cronenberg, this is an extremely nonscientific<br />

and unrealistic concept of a machine,<br />

but I guess that my approach to the robot as a<br />

human extension actually allows the viewers to<br />

relate to Mazinger or Grendizer and helps to<br />

make them so popular worldwide. And even if<br />

Continued on page 7


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 7<br />

CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE<br />

Go Nagai, Go!<br />

Continued from page 6<br />

I said that this is a “non-scientific” vision, if we<br />

look at contemporary cybernetics, the scientists<br />

and engineers of today are putting all their efforts<br />

not in potentiating the robots’ functions or<br />

powers, but in making them more human, either<br />

in their movements, reasoning and facial expression.<br />

Old sci-fi books and movies used to depict<br />

future society as one where the human beings,<br />

acquainted with interacting with machines, lose<br />

all their feelings and become just as dry and cold<br />

as real machines; but if we look at today’s reality<br />

and at the direction that cybernetic studies are<br />

taking, I guess that a human-like robot as Mazinger<br />

or Grendizer has all the chances to become<br />

a reality in our future<br />

AWAD: Westerners were fascinated by<br />

both Japanese culture and Egyptian culture<br />

because they were the oldest civilizations of the<br />

world. How do you interpret the reverse influence<br />

of Manga and Anime on the Western<br />

world?<br />

NAGAI: It is a very peculiar feeling. I<br />

mean, nobody, really not one of us would have<br />

ever thought that Japanese comics and animation<br />

would have one day reached foreign audiences.<br />

I didn’t even know that my animation<br />

characters were broadcast in Europe and Asia,<br />

and I learnt about the Middle East just last year!<br />

When we created our characters - and by “we”<br />

I mean myself, and all my fellow comic artists<br />

- we conceived them only for the domestic<br />

market. Lately, as the Japanese market shrinks<br />

because of the very low birth rate, many authors<br />

have started creating stories with the intention of<br />

gaining international appeal, because they need<br />

revenues from foreign markets to recover their<br />

investments; but it is funny how many of these<br />

stories fail to succeed abroad, while stories like<br />

“Mazinger” or “Grendizer,” which have been created<br />

only and exclusively for Japanese audiences,<br />

resonate more successfully with foreign <strong>read</strong>ers<br />

and viewers!<br />

I think that I must be very proud of their<br />

success, because I remember when, twenty years<br />

ago, a French director told me that before seeing<br />

“Grendizer,” he thought of Japanese people<br />

only as “Economic Animals,” harsh, coldhearted<br />

and inscrutable samurais whose only interest was<br />

to make money and invade the world with their<br />

technological products: only through “Grendizer”<br />

would he eventually discover that Japanese<br />

share the same feelings of love, friendship and<br />

brotherhood of all human beings. So, I believe<br />

animation has helped the world to discover the<br />

real Japanese soul and afforded people a sense<br />

of our culture, more than anything else. For the<br />

same reason, I am looking forward to an original<br />

Arab entertainment industry to develop and extend<br />

its reach internationally, because I believe it<br />

will eventually help in tearing down all the walls<br />

and barriers created by centuries of misunderstanding<br />

or biased reports Western media have<br />

disseminated about the Arab culture.<br />

AWAD: In Shin-Mazinger, you have chosen<br />

to retell the story of Koji and Mazinger in<br />

a more adult and darker approach (noting the<br />

colors and design of characters) not to mention<br />

some graphic violence too. By doing this,<br />

would you like to address a more mature public<br />

with Shin-Mazinger.<br />

NAGAI: Mazinger was born as a comic<br />

book, but when it was decided to transpose it<br />

to animation, the production studio lamented<br />

that they needed to rewrite some characters and<br />

change the original design of Mazinger because<br />

in deference to technology of the early Seventies,<br />

it was considered too complicated. So, the<br />

original Mazinger series was very enjoyable, but<br />

it ended being fairly different from what I had<br />

conceived. This new series is much more similar<br />

to my comic book, but you are perfectly right to<br />

say that it has a darker touch. This depends much<br />

more on a choice by the animation director than<br />

on my personal decision, but I liked his idea and<br />

his skills, so I gave him total freedom to develop<br />

these settings at his own will. Also, this new animation<br />

was broadcast in Japan after midnight, so<br />

it is targeted to the adults who saw the original<br />

“Mazinger” when they were kids and not to today’s<br />

kids. For today’s kids, I guess I should plan<br />

a totally different story.<br />

AWAD: If a live action “Mazinger” or<br />

“Grendizer” film would be made in the future,<br />

would you like to produce it through your company<br />

Dynamic Animation, or would you prefer<br />

to sell the rights to American companies like<br />

Transformers? Would you prefer Japanese or<br />

Western actors to perform the main roles?<br />

NAGAI: I receive many offers, even from<br />

major movie studios, to transfer “Mazinger”<br />

or “Grendizer” to the big screen for live action<br />

movies. Until today, I have refused most of them<br />

because they would very much limit my control<br />

of the story, and also because I don’t think that<br />

computer graphics (CG) has evolved enough<br />

to depict my characters well enough; but today<br />

I believe we can definitely make a convincing<br />

“Mazinger” or “Grendizer” movie by mixing live<br />

action and CG. <strong>The</strong> problem is that such a project<br />

would be so expensive that it would be impossible<br />

to produce it in Japan; also, since childhood,<br />

I used to love Western movies, and the design of<br />

my characters have been affected by the look of<br />

Western actors and actresses, so I guess I would<br />

prefer a Western or mixed staff to a totally Japanese<br />

one. Anyway, the real problem is the budget.<br />

If any Middle Eastern fan of “Mazinger” or<br />

“Grendizer” has the will and the means to invest<br />

in such a project, please contact me (laugh).<br />

AWAD: Finally, I would like you to share<br />

some of your thoughts upon reflecting over this<br />

Arab voyage, especially to Egypt? What have<br />

Continued on page 8


Page 8 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE<br />

Go Nagai, Go!<br />

Continued from page 7<br />

you imagined and what have you discovered<br />

when you spent time among young Egyptian<br />

students of animation?<br />

NAGAI: It’s been a trip of discovery. Images<br />

of the Middle East we get on Western or<br />

Japanese media are totally different from the<br />

reality I had a chance to see during this visit.<br />

ELDERCARE<br />

It’s a Process<br />

By H. LEE WHITEHEAD<br />

All those looking for a new<br />

apartment, house or car, raise<br />

your hands. If we were to compare<br />

each list of considerations,<br />

we would probably find some<br />

common ground. Close to the<br />

top of each list, we might see<br />

considerations such as price, interest rate, location,<br />

and size. Once the lists of considerations are<br />

set, it’s time to go shopping. From the monthly<br />

groceries to the dream home, there is at least one<br />

consistent factor—we need a plan. Without that,<br />

things can get out of control real fast. It’s a process.<br />

And the same process applies when deciding<br />

on the best mode of care for our loved ones.<br />

We are guided by one foundational train of<br />

thought. We want to develop and maintain the<br />

best possible scenario for the family and our dependent<br />

loved one. It is a delicate balance. But,<br />

we are members of <strong>The</strong> Sandwiched Generation<br />

People of the Middle East are incredibly warm,<br />

welcoming, and I have been overwhelmed by<br />

their love for “Grendizer” and “Mazinger.” Also,<br />

I had a chance to visit four totally different countries,<br />

Jordan, Kuwait, Egypt and Dubai, just to<br />

find that you cannot speak of an Arab world that<br />

is distinct, but rather an amalgamation of many<br />

disparate and different societies that comprise<br />

such a world. Media depicts the Arab world<br />

with the images of the streets of Gaza, or of the<br />

911 attacks, and I think this is a very reductive,<br />

or Baby Boomers. This is what we do. So, let’s get<br />

started by taking a look at some of the considerations<br />

we will need to make.<br />

Your loved ones are at the top of the list.<br />

What type of assistance will they require?<br />

<strong>The</strong> physical and medical condition of your<br />

loved one will guide you in determining the<br />

most appropriate care. <strong>The</strong> term Activities of<br />

Daily Living covers a wide range of services<br />

from cooking and shopping to feeding, bathing<br />

companionship and incontinence. You will<br />

probably consider a Home Health Aid or a<br />

C.N.A., (Certified Nursing Assistant), for<br />

these types of services. Typically, a C.N.A. is<br />

trained and certified to provide care for patients<br />

with varying degrees of mobility. <strong>The</strong>y will also<br />

handle incontinence, monitoring of vital signs<br />

and transferring patients from bed to chair as<br />

well as body positioning to decrease the likelihood<br />

of decubitus ulcers.<br />

If your loved one only requires a simple<br />

reminder to take their medications, a C.N.A.<br />

or a Home Health Aid can certainly offer the<br />

reminder. However, dispensing of medications,<br />

charting vital signs and wound care such as decubiti<br />

is another matter. You may need an R.N.,<br />

(Registered Nurse), for that type of hands-on<br />

care. <strong>The</strong> R.N. is licensed to handle medications,<br />

wound care, and chart findings for a supervising<br />

agency or physician. <strong>The</strong>y may also chart and<br />

report findings or observations regarding the patient’s<br />

mental and emotional state. Keep in mind<br />

that transportation could be a totally separate<br />

service. Again, this will depend on the needs of<br />

the patient and the scope of services offered by<br />

the providers you choose.<br />

Now let’s consider your needs.<br />

You are at the helm. <strong>The</strong> Care Giver is<br />

charged with what can be a daunting task at<br />

times. In some cases the job is spaced between<br />

many siblings, a few extended family members,<br />

a couple of very dear friend, or any combination<br />

of these. In many cases it all comes on the shoulders<br />

of one person. Whatever your particular<br />

scenario may be, remember that the plan must<br />

be conducive to both the Care Giver and the<br />

Dependent. If the plan does not meet the needs<br />

of your loved one, something is wrong. you will<br />

not be happy and if it does not help you maintain<br />

(as a card-carrying member of the Sandwiched<br />

FINANCE<br />

Con Ed Delivers What New Yorkers Crave: Fiscal Abuse<br />

By LARRY M. ELKIN<br />

New Yorkers revel in their image<br />

as sharp-elbowed cynics<br />

who take nuthin’ from nobody.<br />

This, however, is a façade; behind<br />

their carefully locked<br />

doors, they cheerfully endure<br />

endless financial abuse.<br />

You al<strong>read</strong>y know about Manhattan apartments<br />

that are glorified broom closets, and parking<br />

spaces that cost as much as some people’s<br />

monthly rent, but I’m not talking about these<br />

things. Nor am I talking about suburban homeowners<br />

who face property taxes that would<br />

amount to a decent yearly income in most of<br />

the country. Nor do I refer to private-school kindergartens<br />

that cost as much as an Ivy League<br />

college.<br />

I am talking about something much more<br />

basic: the price of keeping the lights on and the<br />

furnace running. Thanks to their bloated behemoth<br />

of a utility, Consolidated Edison, residents<br />

of the five boroughs and adjacent northern suburbs<br />

pay staggeringly high prices for electricity<br />

and natural gas. Con Ed likes to blame taxes<br />

and labor costs, but this is a red herring. Con<br />

Ed’s rates are themselves a tax on New Yorkers<br />

– a steep tax that drives businesses and jobs<br />

elsewhere.<br />

This isn’t a secret. New Yorkers know they<br />

pay high prices, and that those prices are marching<br />

steadily higher even as most parts of the<br />

country benefit from stabilizing utility costs.<br />

Yet I think many Con Ed customers would be<br />

astonished to learn exactly how much they pay<br />

compared to people who live in other places.<br />

So my colleague Amy Laburda and I gathered<br />

some bills and took a close look.<br />

First, some basics. Any utility bill has various<br />

components. <strong>The</strong>re is the cost of fuel, such<br />

as natural gas, which some customers burn in<br />

their furnaces and kitchen stoves but which also<br />

biased and, consequently, abusive way to convey<br />

the real spirit of the Arab culture to the world.<br />

As I said, I am looking forward to a genuine<br />

Arab entertainment industry to sp<strong>read</strong> about the<br />

world in order to help other cultures tear down<br />

the walls of misunderstanding. From this point<br />

of view, I can’t wait to see the creative works of<br />

young Egyptian animators and other valuable<br />

young artists of the Middle East. <strong>The</strong>y carry on<br />

their back the burden of thousands of years of<br />

history and of one of the most fascinating cultures<br />

in the world, and it falls onto them define<br />

how to deliver who they are to the people of the<br />

whole planet. I had a chance to appreciate their<br />

skills and I know that they can do it!<br />

Born in Cairo, Egypt, Sherif Awad is a film/video<br />

critic and curator. He is the film editor of Egypt Today<br />

Magazine, and the artistic director for both the<br />

Alexandria Film Festival, in Egypt, and the Arab<br />

Rotterdam Festival, in <strong>The</strong> Netherlands. He also<br />

contributes to Variety, in the United States, and Variety<br />

Arabia, in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).<br />

Generation), So talk about the needs with your<br />

loved one and those helping you. If that is not<br />

possible, it is your decision. Finally we come to<br />

the question of the day---money.<br />

How much will all of this cost and who will<br />

pay? Now we start thinking about Medicare,<br />

Medicaid, pensions, retirement, savings, investments<br />

and private insurances. One might think<br />

this is a really big problem. Everyone can only<br />

do what they can do. Just decide on your care<br />

plan and move forward. Skilled Care Facilities<br />

and other agencies are out there to make money.<br />

When you are <strong>read</strong>y there will be options to explore.<br />

With that in mind, in two weeks we will<br />

examine the highs and lows of various types of<br />

skilled care facilities as well as in home care for<br />

your loved one.<br />

If you would like to share your experience, garner information<br />

or simply sound-off, we would like to hear<br />

from you. So write H. Lee Whitehead at <strong>The</strong> <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

<strong>Guardian</strong>, P.O. Box 8, New Rochelle, New<br />

York 10801, or call: 347.524.7063, or direct email<br />

to: eldercareresource@aol.com<br />

might be used (along with other fuels or power<br />

sources such as water, wind and solar) to generate<br />

electricity. <strong>The</strong>re is the cost of the generating<br />

equipment. <strong>The</strong>re is the cost of the transmission<br />

lines, pipelines and other infrastructure that<br />

delivers the utilities to your home or business.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are taxes, and there is corporate overhead,<br />

covering everything from paper and postage for<br />

monthly statements to executive salaries and<br />

shareholder dividends.<br />

In my comparison, I left out taxes that are<br />

added to the cost of the electricity or gas, and I<br />

tried to separate the prices that Con Ed and its<br />

peers charge for obtaining or producing the gas<br />

and electricity from the prices for delivering it.<br />

Although the mix of power sources – thus<br />

the cost of power – will vary regionally, the cost<br />

of delivering that power generally ought to be<br />

a function of the distance from those power<br />

sources and the density of the customers in the<br />

delivery area. In the Northeast, power is generally<br />

produced close to the consumers who use<br />

it, and it goes mostly to multi-family homes or<br />

to densely populated cities and suburbs. Most<br />

of the New York City area’s electricity is generated<br />

locally from a mix of oil-, gas- and nuclearfueled<br />

generators.<br />

Power delivery charges ought to be cheaper<br />

in a densely populated suburb than, for example,<br />

in rural Vermont. Or, for that matter, cheaper<br />

than in south Florida, where power is carried<br />

over longer distances to fewer customers,<br />

through wires that are more often damaged by<br />

hurricanes and lightning storms.<br />

<strong>The</strong> electricity bills I gathered tell a different<br />

story.<br />

To deliver power to a condominium in Fort<br />

Lauderdale or to a home in central Florida’s<br />

semi-rural Flagler County, Florida Power &<br />

Light charges about 5.2 cents per kilowatt-hour<br />

(kWh) for the first 1,000 kWh each month;<br />

Continued on page 9


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 9<br />

FINANCE<br />

Con Ed Delivers What New Yorkers Crave: Fiscal Abuse<br />

Continued from page 8<br />

additional usage costs 6.2 cents per kWh. <strong>The</strong><br />

charge for generating that power is 3.3 cents per<br />

kWh for the first 1,000, and 4.3 cents thereafter.<br />

Thus, the total charge ranges from 8.5 cents to<br />

10.5 cents per kWh.<br />

At my home in <strong>Westchester</strong> County, Con<br />

Ed charges nearly 12 cents per kWh just to deliver<br />

the power. I don’t buy my electricity from<br />

Con Ed. I purchase it from another vendor,<br />

Gateway Energy, which charges 11.99 cents per<br />

Company<br />

kWh, which is about a penny less than Con Ed.<br />

Even with this modest savings, my total electric<br />

cost in <strong>Westchester</strong> is nearly 24 cents per kWh,<br />

around 2.5 times what I would pay in Florida for<br />

the same amount of power. This is before taxes<br />

are added.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are certain regional differences to take<br />

into account. <strong>The</strong> Northeast and the Southeast<br />

have different energy constraints. Let us consider<br />

Vermont, then. A rural area like Quechee, Vt.,<br />

should be at a disadvantage when competing<br />

with an area just five miles north of New York<br />

City. Nevertheless, Central Vermont Public<br />

Service charges a combined supply and delivery<br />

rate of 14.615 cents per kWh. A few other minor<br />

charges bring the total to about 15.6 cents,<br />

which is still some 40 percent below Con Ed’s<br />

rates.<br />

Natural gas prices have plunged this year.<br />

This should be good news for consumers’ electric<br />

bills, since much of the Northeast’s power is<br />

generated from gas, as well as for consumers who<br />

heat their houses with gas. But thanks to Con<br />

Cost of Power (per<br />

kWh)<br />

Ed’s rate structure, its customers do not receive<br />

nearly as much benefit that they should.<br />

New York regulators allow Con Ed to make<br />

all of its electricity profit from the delivery part<br />

of the business; it just passes along its costs for<br />

generation. <strong>The</strong> company therefore has less incentive<br />

to drive down generating costs by taking<br />

advantage of cheaper gas. It need not even care<br />

whether I buy my electricity from Con Ed or<br />

Gateway; Con Ed makes the same profit either<br />

way.<br />

I use natural gas to heat my <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

home, and the story is similar to the electricity<br />

bills described above. I paid Gateway $0.799015<br />

per therm for natural gas this winter, and ConEd<br />

$0.870192 per therm (beyond the first 3.2,<br />

which are included in a basic service charge) to<br />

deliver the gas to my house. In a comparable setting,<br />

North Shore Gas – which provides natural<br />

gas to suburbs north of Chicago – charged<br />

$0.3745 per therm for gas, with a delivery cost<br />

of $0.17791 per therm for the first 50 and<br />

$0.05881 per therm after that. Customers in<br />

suburban Chicago with homes similar to mine<br />

Delivery & other (per<br />

kWh)<br />

Total cost (per<br />

kWh)<br />

Florida Power and Light Company (first 1000 kWh) $0.03343 $0.05184 $0.08527<br />

Florida Power and Light Company (beyond first 1000 $0.04343 $0.06184 $0.10527<br />

kWh)<br />

Con Edison/Gateway Energy Services $0.11990 $0.11978 $0.23968<br />

Central Vermont Public Service $0.14615 $0.00986 $0.15601<br />

HEALTH<br />

By RICH MONETTI<br />

On Thursday night, <strong>April</strong> 12th,<br />

at the Fox Lane High School<br />

auditorium, the Bedford 2020<br />

coalition and the <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

Land Trust presented - Water,<br />

You are what you Drink.<br />

Aimed at linking the Bedford<br />

watershed system to human health, the audience<br />

was seated by watershed zones to highlight the<br />

obligation each person has in maintaining the<br />

present and future quality of the water we drink.<br />

“When water falls to the earth it follows the<br />

slope of the landscape to the watershed so what<br />

you do matters to your neighbors, said Candace<br />

Schafer, Executive Director of the Land Trust.<br />

Ceding the floor to Dr. Diane Lewis of<br />

2020, the sentiment was seconded. “If we work<br />

together we can impact water quality,” she said.<br />

Board certified in nephrology, equating the<br />

water we drink to her occupation was something<br />

that did not occur to her over night. When it finally<br />

did the analogy was clear. “If your kidneys<br />

cannot filter out contaminates, they end up in<br />

your blood,” she said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> same goes for our watersheds and it’s<br />

still our health that feels the side effects - especially<br />

when it comes to children. “Contaminates<br />

are leading to increases in obesity, diabetes,<br />

ADHD and autism,” said the leader of the coalition’s<br />

Water and Land Use Task Force.<br />

<strong>The</strong> latter two are now strongly linked to a<br />

new class of chemicals that disrupt the endocrine<br />

system. Effecting brain development, the detriments<br />

are not necessarily linked to quantity but<br />

to timing in<br />

which they invade the body. “<strong>The</strong> amounts<br />

that cause problems are so small but if they occur<br />

in the womb or at an early age, the effects are<br />

more pronounced,” she said.<br />

Also included among the problem of Endocrine<br />

disruption is something called male feminization.<br />

Decreased sperm count, undescended<br />

testes and the aforementioned stunted brain development<br />

are associated with the condition. In<br />

2009, she said, the Endocrine Society was able<br />

to reproduce the effects in the lab and has found<br />

the problem in both fish and humans.<br />

This is where the health of our water can<br />

be likened - of sorts - to the weakest link in the<br />

pay only about one-third what I pay for heating<br />

and cooking.<br />

Con Ed likes to invoke a mantra that, under<br />

some obscure law of the cosmos, costs are higher<br />

in New York. It made this claim a few years ago<br />

when it blamed higher taxes. But my comparisons<br />

do not include taxes imposed directly on<br />

consumers. In any event, costs of fuel and equipment<br />

are basically the same everywhere.<br />

One particularly high cost Con Ed incurs<br />

is lobbying. As a monopoly (on power delivery<br />

neighborhood chain. Superfunds and government<br />

regulation exist to combat industrial waste<br />

but there is very little control on the products we<br />

buy and then dump down our drains. In turn,<br />

she recommends finding eco-friendly detergents<br />

and executing sustainable gardening and lawn<br />

care practices.<br />

Of course, leading by example doesn’t necessarily<br />

get the results a water conscious resident<br />

wants out of his or her neighbor. In response,<br />

if not supply), Con Ed must get approval of its<br />

rates from the New York Public Service Commission,<br />

a body which regulates utilities in the<br />

state of New York. To say that New York’s PSC<br />

does a poor job of forcing Con Ed to deliver value<br />

along with its electricity and gas is an understatement.<br />

In 2010, the Commission approved<br />

yearly rate increases for three years, condemning<br />

the state’s consumers to even greater abuse despite<br />

the recent favorable developments in the<br />

gas market.<br />

Con Ed is a drain on the region’s households<br />

and a drag on its economy. It is not an innocent<br />

victim of New York’s high costs, as it likes<br />

to claim; it is a chief contributor to those high<br />

costs and a major incentive for businesses and<br />

householders to set up shop elsewhere.<br />

But after all, a utility is in the business of<br />

satisfying customer demands. And though they<br />

don’t like to admit it in public, New Yorkers seem<br />

to have an affinity for financial pain.<br />

Larry M. Elkin, CPA, CFP®, is president<br />

of Palisades Hudson Financial Group a fee-only<br />

financial planning firm headquartered in Scarsdale,<br />

NY. <strong>The</strong> firm offers estate planning, insurance<br />

consulting, trust planning, cross-border planning,<br />

business valuation, family office and business management,<br />

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Bedford 2020 and <strong>Westchester</strong> Land Trust Host Water Quality Discussion<br />

Dr. Lewis’ intent was not to end the conversation<br />

with the evening’s activism. “We’re hoping<br />

you will work with us so we can educate your<br />

neighbors,” she said.<br />

Bedford 2020 also makes itself available<br />

to speak to groups but purchasing sustainable<br />

products has an important effect beyond the results<br />

that emerge from backyard actions. Demonstrating<br />

buying power, she said, “That’s the<br />

Continued on page 10<br />

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Page 10 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

HEALTH<br />

Bedford 2020 and <strong>Westchester</strong> Land Trust Host Water Quality Discussion<br />

Continued from page 9<br />

beginning of impacting water quality through<br />

legislation.<br />

In the interim, she recommends the informed<br />

purchase of a water filter. “First get your<br />

water tested so your filter is specific to the contaminates<br />

in your water,” she said.<br />

But back in the ecosystem, roads like 684<br />

do their share of the damage. “Oil slicks, deicing<br />

salt and random gravel are all picked up as runoff<br />

HISTORY<br />

Walter W. Law, 1<br />

From Rugs to Riches<br />

By ROBERT SCOTT<br />

Many communities in <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

owe their existence to a<br />

quirk of geography--a protected<br />

harbor on the Hudson River, a<br />

former aboriginal campsite or<br />

the junction of two major stagecoach<br />

roads.<br />

<strong>The</strong> village of Briarcliff<br />

Manor owes its existence to one wealthy patron:<br />

Walter W. Law.<br />

Law, the father of Briarcliff Manor, was born<br />

in 1837 in the English town of Kidderminster. In<br />

the 19th century, the name Kidderminster and<br />

carpets were synonymous. Its carpet industry began<br />

as a cottage industry locally, but the introduction<br />

of steam power paved the way for the huge<br />

carpet mills that would make Kidderminster a<br />

center of carpet manufacture in Britain.<br />

One of ten children of a dealer in carpets and<br />

dry goods, Walter William Law left school and<br />

began working at the age of 14. In 1859, he decided<br />

to immigrate to the United States.<br />

<strong>The</strong> New World Beckons<br />

Leaving England with a few letters of introduction<br />

from his father to friends in the American<br />

carpet trade and with enough money to last him<br />

only about two weeks, Walter Law arrived in New<br />

York on January 22, 1860. It was a Sunday, and<br />

the passengers could not clear customs until the<br />

next day.<br />

Talk of abolition of slavery and secession<br />

was in the air. “With another passenger or two,”<br />

he later recalled, “we went over to Brooklyn, and<br />

heard Henry Ward Beecher preach, and it was the<br />

first and only time I heard him.”<br />

Young Walter Law landed a job as a traveling<br />

carpet salesman. That lasted until he discovered<br />

that his employer was misrepresenting domestic<br />

rugs as imported and charging premium prices for<br />

them. His next employer folded when the Civil<br />

War caused a general business slowdown.<br />

A call on William Sloane, head of the firm<br />

of W. & J. Sloane, resulted in his being hired,<br />

more out of kindness than need. Sloane, his new<br />

employer, had started his working life as an apprentice<br />

weaver in Edinburgh. In 1834, after his<br />

employer failed to reward him for inventing a new<br />

and land back in the watershed,” she said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> best counter to pavement and development<br />

gave way to the second speaker. “Forests<br />

are the kidneys of our water supply,” reiterated<br />

Brendan Murphy of the Watershed Agricultural<br />

Council.<br />

Aside from the said development, the main<br />

threat to forests is the incidence of natural disturbance<br />

like heavy storms or disease. Even so,<br />

forests may contain too many trees of the same<br />

age and natural progression inevitably leads to a<br />

method of weaving tapestry rugs, Sloane had immigrated<br />

to New York.<br />

With his brother John, they established a<br />

carpet business as W. & J. Sloane. <strong>The</strong>ir little store<br />

on Broadway across from City Hall prospered.<br />

William Sloane’s sons took over the business<br />

from their father on his death in 1879. Seven<br />

years earlier, one son, 28-year-old William Douglas<br />

Sloane, had married Emily Thorn Vanderbilt,<br />

Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt’s 20-year-old<br />

granddaughter.<br />

According to newspaper reports, the groom<br />

“got $15,000,000 by the performance. Mr. Sloane<br />

himself is worth many millions in his own right.”<br />

Seventy years later, her granddaughter, Alice<br />

Frances Hammond, would marry jazz musician<br />

Benny Goodman.<br />

In 1882, the Sloane store moved uptown<br />

to an ornate six-story building on the southeast<br />

corner of 19th Street and Broadway, where the<br />

firm sold carpeting, oriental rugs, lace curtains and<br />

upholstery fabric, later expanding to furniture. Fittingly,<br />

the Sloane building today again houses a<br />

carpet store, ABC Carpet. Across Broadway from<br />

W. & J. Sloane was the massive Arnold Constable<br />

significant gap in the tree line.<br />

On the other end, too dense a forest means<br />

a weaker wooding with competition for limited<br />

natural resources. Additionally, a dearth of invasive<br />

vine species can choke off the growth of<br />

younger trees, as can be now seen on many of<br />

our parkways.<br />

In turn, a lack of adequate re-growing conditions<br />

paves the way for weaker forests and<br />

poor water quality. He recommends people stay<br />

connected to the Land Trust in order that their<br />

Manor House of Irene and Paul Bogoni – formerly the mansion home of the Village of Briarcliff Manor<br />

founder, Walter W. Law, situated on Scarborough Road. Photo by and courtesy of the Briarcliff Manor<br />

Scarborough Historical Society.<br />

dry goods establishment.<br />

Opposite Sloane’s on 19th Street was the<br />

eight-story retail building housing the Gorham<br />

Manufacturing Company, famous for its silverware<br />

and metal work. A block north, at the southwest<br />

corner of Broadway and 20th Street, was the<br />

Lord & Taylor dry goods store.<br />

<strong>The</strong> neighborhood of fashionable dry goods<br />

stores and other landmark buildings lies roughly<br />

between 14th and 27th streets and 5th and 7th<br />

avenues. Called the “Ladies’ Mile Historic District,”<br />

its 440 memorable buildings are now preserved<br />

and protected.<br />

Young Walter Law increased the business<br />

of Sloane’s wholesale department by securing the<br />

account of the Alexander Smith & Sons Carpet<br />

Company in Yonkers for the manufacture of moquette<br />

carpets.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se tufted, high-pile carpets produced<br />

on power looms invented by Halcyon Skinner<br />

quickly displaced the popular flat-weave, reversible<br />

carpets. <strong>The</strong>y also undercut pricier handknotted<br />

carpets.<br />

<strong>The</strong> giant Alexander Smith carpet mills in<br />

Yonkers along Nepperhan Avenue were named<br />

towns effectively manage their open space.<br />

Otherwise, people can get their hands dirty<br />

to keep their water clean by simply planting a<br />

tree or getting involved in vine eradication with<br />

environmental groups. Either way, it all starts<br />

and ends in the same place.<br />

“Too maintain our water systems and forestry<br />

it takes a collective effort,” he concluded.<br />

Rich Monetti lives in Somers. He’s been a freelance<br />

writer in <strong>Westchester</strong> since 2003. Peruse his work at<br />

www. rmonetti.blogspot.com.<br />

the Moquette Mills. <strong>The</strong>ir architecturally important<br />

workers’ row housing was built in stepped<br />

fashion on the hill adjacent to the factory.<br />

A Move to <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

Law and his wife, Georgiana Ransom Law,<br />

moved to Yonkers, making it easier for him to<br />

service the Smith account. Here they raised their<br />

two sons and four daughters.<br />

In 1890, health problems forced Walter<br />

Law at age 53 to take early retirement from<br />

the Sloane firm. Tuberculosis was given as the<br />

cause. Unhappy with the prospect of inactivity,<br />

he sought a new venue for his talents and ambition,<br />

and turned his attention to northern <strong>Westchester</strong>.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n as now, the benefits of fresh air and<br />

outdoor living were recognized as important<br />

weapons in fighting infectious diseases like tuberculosis.<br />

<strong>The</strong> newly-retired executive found the<br />

236-acre farm of James Stallman between Old<br />

Briarcliff Road and Pleasantville Road for sale.<br />

He snapped it up in 1890 for $35,000. <strong>The</strong><br />

Stallman farmhouse, originally used by Walter<br />

Law as an office, later became the rectory of St.<br />

<strong>The</strong>resa’s Roman Catholic Church.<br />

When he bought the Stallman property,<br />

it was al<strong>read</strong>y named Briarcliff Farm. <strong>The</strong> term<br />

Briarcliff came from “Brier Cliff,” a name applied<br />

by the Rev. John David Ogilby, professor of<br />

ecclesiastical history at the General <strong>The</strong>ological<br />

Seminary in New York City, to his <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

summer estate.<br />

Once when traveling in England, Dr. Ogilby<br />

had come upon the parish church at Bremerton,<br />

near Salisbury. Desiring to improve property<br />

he owned near Ossining, he donated the land<br />

to the community and retained architect Richard<br />

Upjohn to design a church inspired by the<br />

church Ogilby had seen in Britain. Upjohn was<br />

the architect of many churches in New York<br />

City, the best known of which is Trinity Church<br />

at the head of Wall Street.<br />

Construction of All Saints Church in Briarcliff<br />

Manor began in 1848, but Dr. Ogilby died<br />

in 1851, well before its completion in 1854. <strong>The</strong><br />

original structure, illustrated in the Rev. Robert<br />

Bolton’s 1855 History of the Protestant Episcopal<br />

Church in the County of <strong>Westchester</strong>, was a simple<br />

rectangular building with a steep, gabled roof<br />

and a small, open, wood belfry.<br />

Continued on page 11


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 11<br />

HISTORY<br />

Walter W. Law, 1<br />

Continued from page 10<br />

Swiftly adding additional acreage, Law<br />

made some 40 purchases in the next ten years.<br />

By the turn of the century he owned more than<br />

5,000 acres in <strong>Westchester</strong>.<br />

Walter Law was acutely aware of the connection<br />

between milk and the sp<strong>read</strong> of infectious<br />

diseases like tuberculosis. His Briarcliff<br />

Farms would specialize in the production of certified<br />

milk from tuberculin-tested Jersey cows.<br />

Other farm animals included chickens, pigs,<br />

sheep, pheasants and even a few peacocks.<br />

At its height, Briarcliff Farms boasted some<br />

300 workers. Law’s Briarcliff Dairy processed<br />

3,000 to 4,000 quarts of milk each day, as well as<br />

quantities of cream and butter, shipped to New<br />

York by an early morning milk train on the Putnam<br />

Division.<br />

Briarcliff Farms had its own farm store in<br />

the Windsor Arcade at Fifth Avenue and 46th<br />

Street in the city. Later, Law opened another<br />

store at 2061 Seventh Avenue near 125th Street.<br />

This uptown location was intended to tap the<br />

burgeoning new fashionable neighborhood of<br />

aristocratic apartment houses and popular single-family<br />

brownstones springing up in Harlem,<br />

linked to downtown by elevated and subway<br />

lines.<br />

Walter Law had the Midas touch. Indeed<br />

everything he touched turned to gold. With so<br />

much land available for cultivation in Briarcliff<br />

Manor, it was inevitable that he would turn to<br />

the raising of flowers. Erecting steam-heated<br />

greenhouses that eventually covered 75,000<br />

square feet, he undertook the growing of American<br />

Beauty roses and other flowers on raised<br />

beds for the florist trade.<br />

A greenhouse foreman discovered and<br />

IN MEMORIAM<br />

propagated the pink Briarcliff Rose, an improvement<br />

over the existing strain. It was registered<br />

with the American Rose Society and became extremely<br />

popular. Flower sales eventually reached<br />

$100,000 a year.<br />

It was an easy next step from certified<br />

milk to pure water. Law’s Briarcliff Table Water<br />

Company’s wells tapped aquifers 250 feet<br />

deep, and it offered bottled water in individual<br />

bottles and large jugs complete with office-style<br />

dispensers. <strong>The</strong> water was available in Briarcliff<br />

Farms stores in New York City and at food markets<br />

throughout <strong>Westchester</strong> and as far away as<br />

Lakewood, N.J.<br />

Incorporating a Village<br />

As Walter Law’s “empire” grew, the need for<br />

municipal services became obvious. He proposed<br />

incorporation. One problem: <strong>The</strong> village would<br />

lay in two towns, Ossining and Mount Pleasant,<br />

a permissible sp<strong>read</strong> under law, and in two school<br />

districts—a requirement of state law. He got signatures<br />

from 25 freeholders on a petition requesting<br />

approval for the proposed incorporation.<br />

On September 2, 1902, the supervisors of the<br />

two towns met with the freeholders to discuss the<br />

details of the incorporation. An election followed<br />

ten days later. Everyone who voted was indebted<br />

to Walter Law, either for a house or livelihood or<br />

both. <strong>The</strong> result was resoundingly favorable.<br />

Legend has it that Briarcliff Manor owes the<br />

“Manor” in its name to a remark made by Law’s<br />

friend, industrialist Andrew Carnegie, who called<br />

him “the Laird (lord) of Briarcliff Manor.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> incorporated village of Briarcliff Manor<br />

officially came into existence on November 21,<br />

1902, with William DeNyse Nichols as president.<br />

(This title for the heads of incorporated villages<br />

was later changed to mayor.) Successive mayors<br />

who were long-serving members of the Law family<br />

included Walter Law’s son, Walter W. Law, Jr.,<br />

Dick Clark Brought Mount Vernon’s<br />

Talent to the World<br />

MOUNT VERNON,<br />

NY -- Mount Vernon native<br />

and music industry<br />

icon Dick Clark passed<br />

away early Wednesday<br />

afternoon, <strong>April</strong> 18, <strong>2012</strong>.<br />

“Mount Vernon mourns<br />

the passing of a native<br />

son who has contributed<br />

so much to the entertainment<br />

industry. We<br />

are proud that he called<br />

Mount Vernon home,”<br />

said Mayor Ernest D.<br />

Davis.<br />

Clark who was born<br />

and raised in the city, grew up on Park Lane and<br />

attended AB Davis High School on Gramatan<br />

Avenue. He took dance lessons at the Arthur<br />

Murray Dance School<br />

on 4 th Avenue.<br />

Viola Sharpe, whose<br />

late husband, Mayor<br />

Thomas Sharpe, was inducted<br />

into the Mount<br />

Vernon High School<br />

Hall of Fame along with<br />

Clark, said she remembers<br />

him being amazed<br />

at the amount of trees<br />

that were part of the<br />

city’s landscape. She advised<br />

she last saw him<br />

some years ago, “He was<br />

very proud to call Mount<br />

Vernon home.”<br />

Dick Clark achieved accomplishments not<br />

Continued on page 12<br />

who served from 1905 to 1918, and Henry H.<br />

Law, who served from 1918 to 1936. <strong>The</strong> hamlet<br />

of Scarborough was annexed to Briarcliff Manor<br />

in 1906.<br />

From the beginning, an unusual system was<br />

employed for selecting candidates for the village’s<br />

public offices. <strong>The</strong> system, now formalized by law<br />

as the “People’s Caucus,” allows any eligible citizen<br />

over 18 years of age to seek nomination for office.<br />

Effectively keeping national politics and national<br />

Robert J. Seitz, Jr.<br />

party names out of the system, candidates chosen<br />

by the caucus are almost guaranteed election.<br />

Next week’s article on Briarcliff Manor will<br />

describe Walter Law’s greatest triumph-- construction<br />

of the sprawling 225-room Briarcliff<br />

Lodge that would attract celebrities from all over<br />

the world as guests.<br />

Robert Scott is a semi-retired book publisher and local<br />

historian. He lives in Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y.<br />

Briarcliff Manor station – Walter W. Law, who built Briarcliff Lodge, donated this Tudor-style station<br />

to Briarcliff Manor in 1909. It is currently used as a library. Photo by and courtesy of Karl Zydexx<br />

Jorgensen of www.xydexx.com.<br />

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Page 12 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

IN MEMORIAM<br />

Dick Clark Brought Mount Vernon’s Talent to the World<br />

Continued from page 11<br />

only as a radio and television personality. He<br />

was a very successful businessman who brought<br />

rock and roll to the masses and gave a number<br />

of very successful entertainers their start. A long<br />

list of African American artists credit Clark with<br />

providing them exposure on his highly rated<br />

television dance shows at a time when the music<br />

industry was segregated.<br />

<strong>The</strong> City of Mount Vernon plans to celebrate<br />

Dick Clark’s accomplishments in a manner<br />

worthy of his achievements sometime in the<br />

near future. “Dick Clark was a home grown boy<br />

who made good,” said Mayor Davis. “He joins<br />

the growing list of talent that makes Mount<br />

Vernonites so special. Mr Clark’s important contributions<br />

to American culture cannot be overlooked.”<br />

Flags on city owned buildings are to be<br />

flown at half-staff in honor and recognition of<br />

the passing of one of the city’s local heros.<br />

Mount Vernon has been home to a number<br />

of successful individuals in the entertainment industry.<br />

<strong>The</strong> city, a suburb situated a short distance<br />

from New York City, has been home to a host<br />

of talent: Sidney Portier, Ossie Davis and Ruby<br />

Dee, Art Carney, Denzel Washington, Sean<br />

“Diddy” Combs, E.B. White, “Dwight “Heavy<br />

D” Myers, Phylicia Rashad and Debbie Allen,<br />

Linda Fairstein, Michael Imperioli, Leon Robinson,<br />

and Robin Givens. <strong>The</strong>y have each called<br />

Mount Vernon home.<br />

MEDIA<br />

How the Media Whitewashes Muslim Persecution of Christians<br />

By RAYMOND IBRAHIM<br />

First published by
Gatestone Institute,<br />

<strong>April</strong> 13, <strong>2012</strong> http://<br />

www.meforum.org/3217/<br />

media-muslim-persecutionchristians<br />

When it comes to Muslim<br />

persecution of Christians, the<br />

mainstream media (MSM) has a long paper trail<br />

of obfuscating; while they eventually do state the<br />

bare-bone facts—if they ever report on the story<br />

in the first place, which is rare—they do so after<br />

creating and sustaining an aura of moral relativism<br />

that minimizes the Muslim role.<br />

False Moral Equivalency<br />

As previously discussed, one of the most obvious<br />

ways is to evoke “sectarian strife” between<br />

Muslims and Christians, a phrase that conjures<br />

images of two equally matched—equally abused,<br />

and abusive—adversaries fighting. This hardly<br />

suffices to describe reality: Muslim majorities<br />

persecuting largely passive Christian minorities.<br />

Most recently, for instance, in the context<br />

of the well-documented suffering of Christians<br />

in Egypt, an NPR report declared “In Egypt,<br />

growing tensions between Muslims and Christians<br />

have led to sporadic violence [initiated by<br />

whom?]. Many Egyptians blame the interreligious<br />

strife on hooligans [who?] taking advantage<br />

of absent or weak security forces. Others<br />

believe it’s because of a deep-seated mistrust<br />

between Muslims and the minority Christian<br />

community [ how did the “mistrust” originate?].”<br />

Though the report does highlight cases where<br />

Christians are victimized, the tone throughout<br />

suggests that examples of Muslims victimized<br />

by Christians could just as easily have been<br />

found (not true). Even the title of the report is<br />

“In Egypt, Christian-Muslim Tension is on the<br />

Rise”; the accompanying photo is of a group of<br />

angry Christians, one militantly holding a cross<br />

aloft—not Muslims destroying crosses, which<br />

is what prompts the former to such displays of<br />

religious solidarity.<br />

Two more strategies that fall under the<br />

MSM’s umbrella of obfuscating and minimizing<br />

Islam’s role—strategies that the <strong>read</strong>er<br />

should become acquainted with—appeared<br />

in recent reports dealing with the jihadi group<br />

Boko Haram and its ongoing genocide of Nigeria’s<br />

Christians.<br />

First, some context: Boko Haram, whose<br />

full name in Arabic is “Sunnis for Da’wa [Islamization]<br />

and Jihad,” is a terrorist organization<br />

dedicated to the overthrow of the secular government<br />

and establishment of Sharia law (sound<br />

familiar?). It has been slaughtering Christians<br />

for years, with an uptick since last December’s<br />

Christmas day church bombing, which left<br />

40 Christians dead, followed by its New Year<br />

ultimatum that all Christians must evacuate<br />

northern regions or die—an ultimatum Boko<br />

Haram has been living up to, as hardly a day<br />

goes by without a terrorist attack on Christians<br />

or churches, most recently, last Sunday’s Easter<br />

day church attack that killed nearly 50.<br />

Blurring the Line between<br />

Persecutor and Victim<br />

Now consider some MSM strategies. <strong>The</strong><br />

first one is to frame the conflict between Muslims<br />

and Christians in a way that blurs the line<br />

between persecutor and victim, for example, this<br />

recent BBC report on one of Boko Haram’s<br />

many church attacks that left three Christians<br />

dead, including a toddler. After stating the<br />

bare-bone facts, the report goes on to describe<br />

how “the bombing sparked a riot by Christian<br />

youths, with reports that at least two Muslims<br />

were killed in the violence. <strong>The</strong> two men were<br />

dragged off their bikes after being stopped at a<br />

roadblock set up by the rioters, police said. A row<br />

of Muslim-owned shops was also burned…”<br />

<strong>The</strong> report goes on and on, with a special section<br />

about “very angry” Christians, till one all<br />

but confuses victims with persecutors, forgetting<br />

what the Christians are “very angry” about in the<br />

first place: unprovoked and nonstop terror attacks<br />

on their churches, and the murder of their<br />

women and children.<br />

This is reminiscent of the Egyptian New<br />

Year’s Eve church bombing that left over 20<br />

Christians dead: the MSM reported it, but<br />

under headlines like “Christians clash with police<br />

in Egypt after attack on churchgoers kills<br />

21”(Washington Post) and “Clashes grow as<br />

Egyptians remain angry after attack”(New York<br />

Times)—again, as if frustrated Christians lashing<br />

out against wholesale slaughter is as newsworthy<br />

as the slaughter itself; as if their angry reaction<br />

“evens” everything up.<br />

Dissembling the Perpetrators’ Motivation<br />

<strong>The</strong> second MSM strategy involves dissembling<br />

over the jihadis’ motivation. An AFP report<br />

describing a different Boko Haram church<br />

attack—which also killed three Christians during<br />

Sunday service—does a fair job reporting the<br />

facts. But then it concludes with the following<br />

sentence: “Violence blamed on Boko Haram,<br />

whose goals remain largely unclear, has since 2009<br />

claimed more than 1,000 lives, including more<br />

than 300 this year, according to figures tallied by<br />

AFP and rights groups.”<br />

Although Boko Haram has been howling<br />

its straightforward goals for a decade—enforcing<br />

Sharia law and, in conjunction, subjugating<br />

if not eliminating Nigeria’s Christians—here is<br />

the MSM claiming ignorance about these goals<br />

(earlier the New York Times described Boko<br />

Haram’s goals as “senseless”—even as the group<br />

Continued on page 13


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 13<br />

MEDIA<br />

How the Media Whitewashes Muslim Persecution of Christians<br />

Continued from page 12<br />

continues justifying them on doctrinal grounds).<br />

One would have thought that a decade after the<br />

jihadi attacks of 9/11—in light of all the subsequent<br />

images of Muslims in militant attire<br />

shouting distinctly Islamic slogans such as “Allahu<br />

Akbar!” and calling for Sharia law and the<br />

POLICE INVESTIGATIONS<br />

By NANCY KING<br />

<strong>The</strong> investigation into the fatal<br />

shooting of Kenneth Chamberlain,<br />

Sr., which occurred<br />

on November 19 th , 2011, has<br />

this week uncovered new evidence<br />

that may give credence<br />

to community accusations that<br />

Mr Chamberlain, a 68-year-old U.S. Marine<br />

was taunted with racial slurs, particularly the<br />

term, “Nigger,” when addressing Mr Chamberlain<br />

prior to his being shot to death at the hands<br />

of White Plains Police Officer Anthony Carelli.<br />

In taped recordings memorialized by the Life’s<br />

Alert device to which Mr. Chamberlain subscribed,<br />

White Plains Police Officer Steven<br />

Hart is heard yelling racial slurs at the elderly<br />

man during the confrontation. Hart is heard on<br />

those tapes, obtained by Mr Chamberlain’s legal<br />

counsel Randolph McLaughlin, Esq., using the<br />

“N” word as officers attempted to gain access<br />

into Mr. Chamberlains’s apartment in the Winbrook<br />

Housing complex.<br />

On Friday afternoon, Chamberlain family<br />

attorney Randolph McLaughlin confirmed to<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Westchester</strong> <strong>Guardian</strong> that he indeed was in<br />

receipt of the tape provided by the elder Chamberlain’s<br />

Life Alert service device, confirming<br />

that Officer Hart had indeed used the “N” word<br />

during the confrontation. According to that<br />

tape, Hart can be heard tapping on Chamberlain’s<br />

window and saying the following: “Mr.<br />

Chamberlain, Mr. Chamberlain, Stop… We<br />

have to talk Nigger.”<br />

This taped evidence alone leaves any individual<br />

wondering whether in <strong>2012</strong>, are the White<br />

Plains Police or any police department for that<br />

matter aware of the consequences of using racially<br />

charged language under any circumstance.<br />

Apparently not! In some African-American<br />

communities, the use of the word “n---a” may be<br />

used as a term of “community endearment.” Not<br />

universally accepted by all who hear it to be appropriate,<br />

but it is what it is in discourse among<br />

friends. Officer Hart was in no way shape or<br />

form using a term of endearment, he was spewing<br />

terms and expressions demeaning and demoralizing;<br />

his words were charged with hatred.<br />

After all, it’s <strong>2012</strong>, who the heck would use that<br />

word in public in a predominantly African-<br />

subjugation of “infidels”—reporters would by<br />

now know what their motivation and goals are.<br />

Of course, the media’s obfuscation serves a<br />

purpose: it leaves the way open for the politically<br />

correct, MSM-approved motivations for Muslim<br />

violence: “political oppression,” “poverty,”<br />

“frustration,” and so forth. From here, one can<br />

WPPD Officer Hart Calls Him “Nigger”<br />

WPPD Officer Carelli Shoots U.S. Marine Kenneth Chamberlain, Sr. to Death<br />

Randolph McLaughlin<br />

American Housing project? Oh… that answer<br />

would be somebody who hates people of color.<br />

This however was not Officer Hart’s first<br />

brush with bias based language and the lawsuits<br />

that often accompany it. On January 15, 2011,<br />

Officer Hart is accused of bashing a patron’s<br />

head to the pavement outside the Cabo Lounge<br />

nightclub on Mamaroneck Avenue. Edgar Maraud,<br />

a bank manager from Port Chester and<br />

a friend, had just left the Cabo Lounge after<br />

an evening out. As he and a friend were leaving<br />

the lounge and headed to their car, Officer<br />

Hart sprang up, grabbed Maraud and threw him<br />

to the ground. Maraud’s head was repeatedly<br />

bashed into the ground and he suffered a broken<br />

nose. Originally, Maraud was charged with<br />

disorderly conduct but those charges were later<br />

dismissed and again refiled. <strong>The</strong> case is currently<br />

winding its way through the justice system. And<br />

by the way, Maraud is Latino.<br />

It must be noted however that the White<br />

Plains Police Department don’t always reserve<br />

their abuse to only those of color. In 2006, an<br />

individual (who happens to be white and middle<br />

aged) was stopped during a routine traffic stop at<br />

the corner of Mitchell Place and Mamaroneck<br />

Avenue for having a signal light out. None<br />

other than alleged shooter WPPD Officer<br />

Anthony Carelli stopped him. Rather than giving<br />

a courtesy reminder that the light was out,<br />

Carelli pulled the individual out of the car, rifled<br />

through his wallet, strewing his personal papers<br />

all over Mitchell Place while calling for back up.<br />

see why politicians like former U.S. president<br />

Bill Clinton cite “poverty” as “what’s fueling all<br />

this stuff ” (a reference to Boko Haram’s slaughter<br />

of Christians), or the U.S. Assistant Secretary<br />

of State for African Affairs insistence that “religion<br />

is not driving extremist violence” in Nigeria,<br />

which he said in response to last Sunday’s Easter<br />

day church bombing.<br />

In short, while the MSM may report the<br />

And of course, at all times, weapons were drawn<br />

because any routine traffic stop for a burnt out<br />

bulb calls for all the fire power one can muster.<br />

Such appears to be the workday life of a<br />

White Plains Police Department officer. Just<br />

recently I lay in bed listening to a dispatch of a<br />

man being beat by a group of at least 7 people<br />

on Rathbun Avenue in White Plains. At least<br />

6 minutes later I heard it re-dispatched after<br />

numerous people had called it in. From the description<br />

of the victim, said to be wearing white<br />

pants, of Hispanic origin, you couldn’t help but<br />

wonder if the police, whose department is less<br />

than 2 minutes away by vehicle from Rathbun<br />

Avenue weren’t taking their sweet time answering<br />

this call. Hispanic, a person of color… they<br />

most frugal facts concerning Christian persecution,<br />

they utilize their entire arsenal of semantic<br />

games, key phrases, and convenient omissions<br />

that uphold the traditional narrative—that<br />

Muslim violence is anything but a byproduct of<br />

the Islamic indoctrination of intolerance.<br />

Raymond Ibrahim is a Shillman Fellow at the David<br />

Horowitz Freedom Center and an Associate<br />

Fellow at the Middle East Forum<br />

just don’t seem to matter to the White Plains<br />

Police Department.<br />

Perhaps the saddest statement of all came<br />

from Chamberlain family attorney Randolph<br />

McLaughlin when he told <strong>The</strong> <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

<strong>Guardian</strong>, “We just can’t have this case swept<br />

under the rug.” Unfortunately Mr. McLaughlin<br />

and I shared a sad laugh when we recounted the<br />

statement that former Judge Sol Wachtel used<br />

to say… lightly paraphrased, it is attributed that<br />

if a DA wanted it so, they could get a ham sandwich<br />

indicted. Unfortunately we have seen the<br />

DA drop the ball on the homicide of DJ Henry<br />

and side with the police. Will the vox populi<br />

have their voices heard in the matter of Kenneth<br />

Chamberlain senior? Only time will tell.<br />

Additional reporting by Hezi Aris.<br />

Nancy King is a freelance, investigative reporter; a<br />

resident of Greenburgh, New York.


Page 14 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY, APRIL 19 <strong>2012</strong><br />


<br />


<br />


Dennis
Sheehan
resides
in
<strong>Westchester</strong>
with
his
wife,
four
children
and
four
<br />

grandchildren.
He
has
traveled
extensively
and
has
worked
in
China,
Russia
and
<br />

South
America
and
Africa.
His
first
novel
Purchased
Power
has
been
a
huge
<br />

success
and
his
second
thriller;
Green
to
Red
will
be
out
soon.
He
is
a
regular
<br />


 guest
on
<strong>Westchester</strong>
on
the
Level
with
Hezi
Aris.
<br />


 
<br />


<br />


Dennis
Sheehan
resides
in
<strong>Westchester</strong>
with
his
wife,
four
children
and
four
<br />


<br />

grandchildren.
He
has
traveled
extensively
and
has
worked
in
China,
Russia
and
<br />


Nancy
B.
Brewer
is
an
award
winning
author,
storyteller
and
poetess.

She
is
<br />

South
America
and
Africa.
His
first
novel
Purchased
Power
has
been
a
huge
<br />

known
for
her
soft
southern
style
and
passion
for
weaving
historically
accurate
<br />

success
and
his
second
thriller;
Green
to
Red
will
be
out
soon.
He
is
a
regular
<br />

stories,
such
as:
"Carolina
Rain"
and
"Beyond
Sandy
Ridge"
<br />


<br />

guest
on
<strong>Westchester</strong>
on
the
Level
with
Hezi
Aris.
<br />


<br />


 
<br />


Dennis
Sheehan
resides
in
<strong>Westchester</strong>
with
his
wife,
four
children
and
four
<br />


 
<br />

grandchildren.
He
has
traveled
extensively
and
has
worked
in
China,
Russia
and
<br />


 
<br />

South
America
and
Africa.
His
first
novel
Purchased
Power
has
been
a
huge
<br />


As
a
detective,
in
the
UK,
Paul
Anthony
served
with
Cumbria
CID,
the
Regional
<br />


Nancy
B.
Brewer
is
an
award
winning
author,
storyteller
and
poetess.

She
is
<br />

success
and
his
second
thriller;
Green
to
Red
will
be
out
soon.
He
is
a
regular
<br />

Crime
Squad
in
Manchester,
the
Special
Branch,
the
anti‐terrorist
branch
and
<br />

known
for
her
soft
southern
style
and
passion
for
weaving
historically
accurate
<br />

guest
on
<strong>Westchester</strong>
on
the
Level
with
Hezi
Aris.
<br />

other
national
agencies
in
London
and
elsewhere.
He
uses
his
personal
<br />

stories,
such
as:
"Carolina
Rain"
and
"Beyond
Sandy
Ridge"
<br />


<br />

experiences
to
write
fiction
regarding
crime
thrillers,
murder
mystery,
<br />


<br />


<br />

espionage,
terrorism,
political
intrigue
and
the
interplay
of
human
<br />


<br />


<br />


 relationships.
 
Nancy
B.
Brewer
is
an
award
winning
author,
storyteller
and
poetess.

She
is
<br />


 
As
a
detective,
in
the
UK,
Paul
Anthony
served
with
Cumbria
CID,
the
Regional
<br />

known
for
her
soft
southern
style
and
passion
for
weaving
historically
accurate
<br />


<br />

Crime
Squad
in
Manchester,
the
Special
Branch,
the
anti‐terrorist
branch
and
<br />

stories,
such
as:
"Carolina
Rain"
and
"Beyond
Sandy
Ridge"
<br />


 other
national
agencies
in
London
and
elsewhere.
He
uses
his
personal
<br />


<br />

Magdalena
Capurso
is
an
Art
representative
for
international
portraitist
<br />

experiences
to
write
fiction
regarding
crime
thrillers,
murder
mystery,
<br />

Kenneth
Hari.
Influenced
by
Shakespeare,
Lord
Byron,
Blake,
Rilke,
she
is
<br />


<br />

espionage,
terrorism,
political
intrigue
and
the
interplay
of
human
<br />


<br />

working
on
a
collection
of
poems
that
reflect
upon
nature
and
spirituality.
<br />

relationships.
<br />


As
a
detective,
in
the
UK,
Paul
Anthony
served
with
Cumbria
CID,
the
Regional
<br />

Magdalena
resides
in
NYC.
<br />


<br />

Crime
Squad
in
Manchester,
the
Special
Branch,
the
anti‐terrorist
branch
and
<br />


 
<br />

other
national
agencies
in
London
and
elsewhere.
He
uses
his
personal
<br />


 
<br />

experiences
to
write
fiction
regarding
crime
thrillers,
murder
mystery,
<br />


 Magdalena
Capurso
is
an
Art
representative
for
international
portraitist
<br />

espionage,
terrorism,
political
intrigue
and
the
interplay
of
human
<br />


 Kenneth
Hari.
Influenced
by
Shakespeare,
Lord
Byron,
Blake,
Rilke,
she
is
<br />

relationships.
<br />

Stephen
Woodfin
is
an
attorney/author
who
has
written
five
legal
<br />

working
on
a
collection
of
poems
that
reflect
upon
nature
and
spirituality.
<br />


<br />

thrillers.

He
blogs
on
Venture
Galleries
<br />

Magdalena
resides
in
NYC.
<br />


<br />

(http://venturegalleries.com/author/stephenwoodfin
)
<br />


<br />


<br />


 
<br />

Magdalena
Capurso
is
an
Art
representative
for
international
portraitist
<br />


 
<br />

Kenneth
Hari.
Influenced
by
Shakespeare,
Lord
Byron,
Blake,
Rilke,
she
is
<br />


 
<br />

working
on
a
collection
of
poems
that
reflect
upon
nature
and
spirituality.
<br />


 Stephen
Woodfin
is
an
attorney/author
who
has
written
five
legal
<br />

Magdalena
resides
in
NYC.
<br />


 thrillers.

He
blogs
on
Venture
Galleries
<br />


<br />


<br />

(http://venturegalleries.com/author/stephenwoodfin
)
<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


At
30,
I
had
a
massive
stroke.
18
months
later,
I
returned
to
work
as
a
<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />

after
a
3rd
stroke,
I
write!
<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />

<strong>The</strong> Wr ters Collection<br />

http://www.<strong>The</strong>WritersCollection.com<br />

Nancy B. Brewer<br />

Nancy B. Brewer is an<br />

award winning author,<br />

storyteller and poetess.<br />

She is known for her<br />

soft southern style and<br />

passion for weaving historically<br />

accurate stories, such as: ”Carolina Rain”<br />

and ”Beyond Sandy Ridge”<br />

Paul Anthony<br />

As a detective, in the UK,<br />

Paul Anthony served<br />

with Cumbria CID, the<br />

Regional Crime Squad in<br />

Manchester, the Special<br />

Branch, the anti terrorist branch<br />

and other national agencies in London<br />

and elsewhere. He uses his personal<br />

experiences to write fiction regarding<br />

crime thrillers, murder mystery,<br />

espionage, terrorism, political intrigue<br />

and the interplay of human relationships<br />

Magdalena Capurso<br />

Magdalena Capurso is<br />

an Art representative for<br />

international portraitist<br />

Kenneth Hari. Influenced<br />

by Shakespeare, Lord<br />

Byron, Blake, Rilke, she is working<br />

on a collection of poems that reflect<br />

upon nature and spirituality. Magdalena<br />

resides in NYC.<br />

THE TOPIC OF THE WEEK: Mistakes<br />

Mistaken<br />

By CALEB PIRTLE III<br />

Buck Newsome feared the Lord Almighty,<br />

but nobody else, and he had no use at all for the<br />

man in the fancy robe who preached God’s word<br />

in a tongue he could not understand. Newsome<br />

didn’t <strong>read</strong> the Good Book much, but he knew<br />

that, if he wasn’t sorely mistaken, one of God’s<br />

words surely had something to do with compassion,<br />

and the man in the fancy robes either<br />

didn’t know it, had forgotten it, or just didn’t give<br />

a damn anymore, and by gawd, it was about time<br />

he did.
<br />

Buck Newsome stomped – with red face<br />

and cool, lethal eyes – alonside the dirt and trash<br />

of a South Texas sidewalk, a border patrolman<br />

who had grown tired of kicking hungry illegal<br />

aliens back beyond the Rio Grande. He didn’t<br />

mind removing them to their homeland. Hell,<br />

that was his job. He just hated to see them go<br />

home with their bellies as empty as their hopes.
<br />

Newsome glanced back at the old woman<br />

and the boy who toddled along after him. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

owned nothing and were wearing the only possessions<br />

they had. <strong>The</strong> old woman’s dress, a collection<br />

of patches and rags, dragged the ground,<br />

and the boy rolled his eyes and slobbered. His<br />

jeans were torn and hadn’t been washed since<br />

he put them on for the first time. He was barefoot,<br />

the bottom of his feet as tough and scarred<br />

as shoe leather. She was worn out, and he was<br />

mentally retarded, and together they had fled<br />

Mexico, escaping to the land of promises where<br />

even an old woman and her backward grandson<br />

could find work and pennies to buy their b<strong>read</strong>.
<br />

That was the promise.
<br />

Buck Newsome knew better.
<br />

<strong>The</strong> old woman had crawled to the foot of<br />

the church and prayed. She prayed all night and<br />

all week. At first she prayed for a job, then a roof<br />

over her head, then food for her grandson, and<br />

finally she just prayed that God would end her<br />

misery. God may have heard her. Buck Newsome<br />

came along and answered that prayer.
<br />

In the year of ’51, he had seen the banjobellied,<br />

cigar-smoking, high-rolling farmers of<br />

the Rio Grande Valley sneak wetbacks across<br />

the border, work them hard for weeks, then<br />

frantically call the Border Patrol to arrest them<br />

as illegal aliens. No passport. No visa. No papers<br />

of citizenship. It was easier to send the wetbacks<br />

home than pay them.
And there was always another<br />

unfortunate and unsuspecting soul wading<br />

the river to take their place at the bottom<br />

of a ladder with no rungs. Some he carried back<br />

across the Rio Grande and set free, whether they<br />

knew it or not. Some he buried in dry ground.<br />

No name. No age. No next of kin. He simply<br />

laid them away with a short scripture among the<br />

weeds and never amidst the flowers.
<br />

Somewhere in the church, if he wasn’t sorely<br />

mistaken, the man in the fancy robe was blessing<br />

souls in a tongue that Newsome could not<br />

understand and forgiving sins and washing them<br />

away in hundred-dollar bills. And the farmers<br />

were all singing Jesus Loves Me, but not the<br />

wetbacks in the field.
<br />

Newsome had found the old woman and<br />

the slobbering twelve-year-old that morning, sitting<br />

alone in a back alley of Edinburg. <strong>The</strong>y had<br />

left San Luis Potosi and ridden on a crowded<br />

bus until she ran out of money. <strong>The</strong>n they had<br />

walked the crooked road for nine days, searching<br />

for salvation just north of the river.
<br />

All she wanted was a job. But no one was<br />

hiring an old woman with a mentally retarded<br />

grandson who slobbered on himself, and she<br />

could not leave him because she was all he had.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y sat down in the night and were waiting<br />

to die together, although the grandson did not<br />

know it. <strong>The</strong> boy didn’t know anything except<br />

that he was hungry, and he devoured the cheese,<br />

crackers, and sardines that Newsome dropped in<br />

his lap.
<br />

And now, by gawd, Buck Newsome was<br />

dead set on teaching the man in the fancy robe<br />

about compassion if he had to do with the blunt<br />

end of a rusted shovel. He banged on the cathedral<br />

door, and a lovely young lady opened it.
<br />

“I want to see the padre,” Newsome told her.
<br />

“He’s in the gym doing his morning exercises,”<br />

she answered.
<br />

“We’ll wait.”
<br />

Minutes later, the sweating Irish padre<br />

swaggered into the room, red-haired and hairychested,<br />

his fat belly – usually hidden by a fancy<br />

robe – hanging out over a pair of silk boxing<br />

trunks.
<br />

“Why are you here?” he asked.
<br />

“This woman and her grandson need help,”<br />

Newsome replied as softly as his brusque voice<br />

could manage. “If I’m not sorely mistaken, they<br />

are of the same religious faith that you are, and I<br />

thought you might be able to help them.
<br />

<strong>The</strong> padre nodded.
<br />

<strong>The</strong> woman, crying, fell to her knees and<br />

kissed his hand, and he blessed her. She had<br />

never expected to be so close to someone so holy.
<br />

“She doesn’t need her soul blessed,” Newsome<br />

said, biting off his words like tobacco and<br />

spitting them in the padre’s face. “She needs her<br />

belly full of groceries.”
<br />

“We don’t have the money to give everyone<br />

who knocks on our door,” the padre said.
<br />

“I thought the Good Lord said to feed the<br />

poor.”
<br />

“He had better resources than we do.”
<br />

“So you’re gonna let her and the boy walk<br />

away hungry.”
<br />

“We’re here for lost souls.”
<br />

“But not hungry ones.”
<br />

“I’m sorry.”
<br />

Frank Matheis is a writer who resides in Pawlin<br />

York. He has published more than four-hundred<br />

and political newspaper articles, and six short st<br />

He was three times short listed for the Fish Shor<br />

Story prize in Ireland. Besides his day job as<br />

international marketing director for a green techno<br />

company, Curtis Instruments, he is active in radio<br />

producing and Roots & Blues musicology, including<br />

policeman.
My
career
ended
after
a
2nd
stroke
so
I
took
up
painting.
Now,
<br />

publisher of www.thecountryblues.com<br />

Stephen
Woodfin
is
an
attorney/author
who
has
written
five
legal
<br />

thrillers.

He
blogs
on
Venture
Galleries
<br />

(http://venturegalleries.com/author/stephenwoodfin
)
<br />


<br />


 
<br />


At
30,
I
had
a
massive
stroke.
18
months
later,
I
returned
to
work
as
a
<br />


 
<br />

policeman.
My
career
ended
after
a
2nd
stroke
so
I
took
up
painting.
Now,
<br />

after
a
3rd
stroke,
I
write!
<br />


 
Dennis
Sheehan
resides
in
<strong>Westchester</strong>
with
his
wife,
four
children
and
four
<br />


 grandchildren.
He
has
traveled
extensively
and
has
worked
in
China,
Russia
and
<br />


<br />

South
America
and
Africa.
His
first
novel
Purchased
Power
has
been
a
huge
<br />


<br />

success
and
his
second
thriller;
Green
to
Red
will
be
out
soon.
He
is
a
regular
<br />


At
30,
I
had
a
massive
stroke.
18
months
later,
I
returned
to
work
as
a
<br />

guest
on
<strong>Westchester</strong>
on
the
Level
with
Hezi
Aris.
<br />

policeman.
My
career
ended
after
a
2nd
stroke
so
I
took
up
painting.
Now,
<br />


<br />


 after
a
3rd
stroke,
I
write!
<br />


<br />


Nancy
B.
Brewer
is
an
award
winning
author,
storyteller
and
poetess.

She
is
<br />

known
for
her
soft
southern
style
and
passion
for
weaving
historically<br />

stories,
such
as:
"Carolina
Rain"
and
"Beyond
Sandy
Ridge"
<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


As
a
detective,
in<br />

Crime
S<br />

Dennis Sheehan Frank Matheis Bibiana Huang Matheis<br />

Dennis Sheehan resides<br />

in <strong>Westchester</strong> with his<br />

wife, four children and<br />

four grandchildren.<br />

He has traveled<br />

extensively and has worked<br />

in China, Russia and South America and<br />

Africa. His first novel Purchased Power<br />

has been a huge success and his second<br />

thriller; Green to Red will be out soon. He<br />

is a regular guest on <strong>Westchester</strong> on the<br />

Level with Hezi Aris.<br />

Frank Matheis is a writer<br />

who resides in Pawling,<br />

New York. He has published<br />

more than four-hundred<br />

music and political newspaper<br />

articles, and six short stories.<br />

He was three times short listed for the Fish<br />

Short Story prize in Ireland. Besides his<br />

day job as international marketing director<br />

for a green technology company, Curtis<br />

Instruments, he is active in radio producing<br />

and Roots & Blues musicology, including<br />

as publisher of www.thecountryblues.com<br />

Frank Matheis is a writer who resides in Pawling, New<br />

York. He has published more than four-hundred music<br />

and political newspaper articles, and six short stories.<br />

He was three times short listed for the Fish Short<br />

Story prize in Ireland. Besides his day job as<br />

international marketing director for a green technology<br />

company, Curtis Instruments, he is active in radio<br />

producing and Roots & Blues musicology, including as<br />

publisher of www.thecountryblues.com<br />

Bibiana Huang Matheis<br />

is a professional fine art<br />

photographer with a<br />

studio in Pawling, New<br />

York. Her work has<br />

been published internationally<br />

and she regularly exhibits nationwide.<br />

She studied at the Corcoran School of Art<br />

and the Maryland College of Art & Design.<br />

www.bibiphoto.com<br />

Bibiana Huang Matheis is a professional<br />

fine art photographer with a studio in<br />

Pawling, New York. Her work has been<br />

published internationally and she regularly<br />

exhibits nationwide. She studied at the<br />

Corcoran School of Art and the Maryland<br />

College of Art &<br />

Design. www.bibiphoto.com<br />

Bibiana Huang Matheis is a professional<br />

fine art photographer with a studio in<br />

Pawling, New York. Her work has been<br />

published internationally and she regularly<br />

exhibits nationwide. She studied at the<br />

Corcoran School of Art and the Maryland<br />

College of Art &<br />

Design. www.bibiphoto.com<br />

S. Martin Friedman has been a photographer and<br />

printmaker for more than 50 years. During that time he<br />

has earned three degrees in art, including a Master’s<br />

Degree in Photography and a Post Graduate Degree in<br />

Graphics. He has also taught art on the secondary and<br />

college levels, and operated his own Gallery and<br />

Framing operation in <strong>Westchester</strong> Co<br />

His artwork has sold in Ga<br />

and has been se<br />

Mus


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY, APRIL 19, <strong>2012</strong><br />


<br />

Page 15<br />

<strong>The</strong> Wr ters Collectionafter
a
3<br />


<br />

http://www.<strong>The</strong>WritersCollection.com<br />

Buck Newsome narrowed his eyes and<br />

folded his arms in defiance. “I take the poor<br />

ones across the border every day and turn them<br />

loose,” he said. “My orders are to stand there<br />

and make sure none of them come back.”
<br />

“How can you keep them out?”
<br />

Newsome grinned. “<strong>The</strong> Good Lord gave<br />

you a Bible. He gave me a pistol.”
<br />

“We both have our jobs to do.”
<br />

“I’m taking a bunch over this morning,”<br />

Newsome said.<br />

“I suggest you be packed and <strong>read</strong>y to leave<br />

in, say, fifteen minutes or so. You can preach to<br />

them all the way home.”
<br />

<strong>The</strong> color drained from the Padre’s face.<br />

“You can’t do that to me.”
<br />

“I can deport pretty much who I damn<br />

well please.”
<br />

“That would be a grave mistake.”
<br />

“It’s a mistake I can live with,” Newsome<br />

said.
“I’ll have your badge,” the padre said.
<br />

“Probably,” Newsome said with a nonchalant<br />

shrug.<br />

“But, if I’m not sorely mistaken, you’ll have<br />

to get back across the river first.”
<br />

“<strong>The</strong> river’s not that wide.”
<br />

Krystal Wade<br />

A mother of three who<br />

works fifty miles from home<br />

and writes in her ”spare<br />

time” Krystal’s debut<br />

novel “Wilde’s Fire” has<br />

been accepted for publication<br />

and should be available in <strong>2012</strong><br />

Stephen Woodfin is an<br />

attorney/author who has<br />

written five legal thrillers.<br />

He blogs on Venture<br />

Galleries (http://venturegalleries.<br />

com/author/stephenwoodfin )<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />

J<br />

an<br />

Ve<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


Caleb<br />


<br />

screen<br />


<br />


<br />

Southe<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


Jack
Durish
was
born
in
Baltimore,
Maryland,
in
1943.
He
is
a
soldier
and
a
<br />


<br />


<br />

sailor,
a
decorated
veteran
of
Vietnam,
a
husband,
father,
and
grandfather.
<br />


<br />


<br />

Jack
is
the
author
of
Rebels
on
the
Mountain,
available
at
all
eBook
retailers,
<br />


<br />


<br />

and
a
blogger
at
JackDurish.com,
<strong>The</strong>WritersCollection.com,
and
<br />


<br />


<br />

VentureGalleries.com.
<br />


Jack
Durish
was
born
in
Baltimore,
Maryland,
in
1943.
He
is
a
soldier
and
a
 
A
mother
o<br />


<br />

sailor,
a
decorated
veteran
of
Vietnam,
a
husband,
father,
and
grandfather.
 time".
<br />


<br />

Jack
is
the
author
of
Rebels
on
the
Mountain,
available
at
all
eBook
retailers,
 
<br />


<br />

and
a
blogger
at
JackDurish.com,
<strong>The</strong>WritersCollection.com,
and
 
<br />


<br />

VentureGalleries.com.
<br />


<br />


Caleb
Pirtle
III
is
the
author
of
more
than
55
published
books,
the
<br />


<br />


<br />

screenwriter
for
three
made‐for‐TV
movies,
and
a
former
travel
editor
of
<br />


<br />


<br />

Southern
Living
Magazine.
<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


Caleb
Pirtle
III
is
the
author
of
more
than
55
published
books,
the
<br />


<br />

screenwriter
for
three
made‐for‐TV
movies,
and
a
former
travel
editor
of
<br />


<br />

Southern
Living
Magazine.
<br />


<br />


<br />


A
mother
of
three
who
works
fifty
miles
from
home
and
writes
in
her
"spare
<br />


<br />

time".
<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


A
mother
of
three
who
works
fifty
miles
from
home
and
writes
in
her
"spare
<br />


<br />

time".
<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />

“I’ll be waiting,” Newsome said. His grin<br />

was a scar and devoid of humor.
<br />

<strong>The</strong> padre frowned and looked hard at the<br />

patrolman.
He blinked.
Newsome knew he<br />

would.
<br />

“I can spare her ten dollars,” the padre said<br />

at last.
<br />

“Not enough.”
<strong>The</strong> padre paced the room.<br />

He was sweating again. He had no problem<br />

dealing with the devil. But Buck Newsome<br />

frightened him. God may have been the judge.<br />

But Newsome was the law. God only condemned<br />

mankind. Buck Newsome carried a<br />

gun.
<br />

“How much is enough?” he asked.
<br />

“If I’m not sorely mistaken,” Newsome<br />

said, “it’ll take about a hundred to keep them<br />

bed and get them back to their village.”
From<br />

his safe, the padre hesitantly and gingerly removed<br />

a cigar box filled with hundred-dollar<br />

bills. Newsome pried one of the bills loose and<br />

handed it to the old woman.
<br />

A tear touched her eye.
<br />

She was rich.
<br />

Maybe not forever.
<br />

But for a day, she was rich.
<br />

Newsome turned to the padre and said,<br />

“May the good lord take a liking to you. I don’t.”
<br />

Late that afternoon, he loaded the old<br />

woman and the boy in his pickup truck, carried<br />

them down to the bridge at Hidalgo, and<br />

pointed them south toward home. A bus would<br />

pick them up before sundown.<br />

Newsome thought for a moment he saw<br />

her smile. But maybe he was sorely mistaken.<br />

Maybe it was only indigestion. That happened<br />

sometime when a full belly had never been full<br />

before.<br />

Mistaken<br />

By BOB WEIR<br />

Mistaken for a burglar?<br />

It was about 2 a.m. on a chilly night in<br />

the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn.<br />

While on radio car patrol, my partner and I<br />

were notified that an anonymous caller heard<br />

unusual sounds at a hardware store that had<br />

been closed for several hours. Since we couldn’t<br />

find a break in front, we checked the hallway of<br />

the building next door, finding a window that<br />

accessed the rear yard. I climbed onto a narrow<br />

ledge and inched my way toward the grimylooking<br />

rear window of the store. My partner<br />

Caleb Pirtle, III<br />

Caleb Pirtle III is the author<br />

of more than 55 published<br />

books, the screenwriter for<br />

three made for TV movies,<br />

and a former travel editor<br />

of Southern Living Magazine<br />

kept an eye on me as I approached the iron bars<br />

that had been bent wide enough apart to allow<br />

someone to squeeze through. <strong>The</strong>re was no<br />

way of knowing whether the burglar was still<br />

inside and a quick records check from the station<br />

house told us that the owner lived about<br />

an hour away. I carefully placed a leg through<br />

the bars, trying to find a solid place to hold my<br />

weight as I pushed the rest of me inside the<br />

darkened enclosure.<br />

With one leg stationed on a firm object, I<br />

gingerly added the rest of my 180 pounds to<br />

the unseen platform. While continuing to hold<br />

onto the bars and trying to adjust my eyes to<br />

the blackness, the ground suddenly gave way<br />

and I was sent crashing against a nearby wall.<br />

I stumbled in the darkness until I regained<br />

some balance. “Bob; are you okay?” my partner<br />

yelled from the hallway window, about 20 feet<br />

away. I drew my service revolver before turning<br />

on the flashlight. When the 6 by 8 foot space<br />

materialized I saw the remains of a toilet bowl<br />

that had been crushed under the strain of my<br />

weight. “I’m okay,” I called back. “Stay there until<br />

I check it out.” I pulled open the door that led<br />

to a narrow aisle in the rear of the store. When<br />

I looked to my left I saw the front door facing<br />

the street; to my right was a wall about 10<br />

feet away. In front of me was a curtain that appeared<br />

to be concealing a small room. Suddenly,<br />

the curtain began to move as if someone was<br />

pushing against it.
“Who’s there?” a voice from<br />

inside the curtained area said. “<strong>The</strong> police,” I responded,<br />

“come out of there!” <strong>The</strong> curtain was<br />

moved aside and a short, muscular man stepped<br />

out of a small bed as he rubbed his eyes. He<br />

was wearing a tank top t-shirt and boxer-type<br />

under shorts. “What’s the matter, officer,” he<br />

said innocently. “That’s what I want you to tell<br />

me,” I replied, keeping the gun pointed at him.<br />

C.C. Cole<br />

C.C.Cole is a Dark Fantasy<br />

writer from rural Mississippi<br />

who lives in the suburbs<br />

with her family. Besides<br />

writing, other interests<br />

include medieval and 20th<br />

century history, martial arts, and adopted<br />

greyhounds.<br />


<br />


<br />

Stephen Woodfin<br />

Philip Catshill<br />

At 30, I had a massive stroke.<br />

18 months later, I returned<br />

to work as a policeman.<br />

My career ended after<br />

a 2nd stroke so I took up<br />

painting. Now, after a 3rd stroke, I<br />

write!<br />

Jack Durish<br />

Jack Durish was born in<br />

Baltimore, Maryland, in<br />

1943. He is a soldier and a<br />

sailor, a decorated veteran<br />

of Vietnam, a husband,<br />

father, and grandfather. Jack is the<br />

author of Rebels on the Mountain, available<br />

at all eBook retailers, and a blogger at<br />

JackDurish.com, <strong>The</strong>WritersCollection.com,<br />

and VentureGalleries.com.<br />


<br />


<br />

S. Martin Friedman<br />

operated his own Atelier he did master printing for artists such as LeRoy<br />

Neiman and Salvador Dali.<br />

He now specializes in landscape, nature and panoramic images.<br />

S. Martin Friedman has<br />

been a photographer and<br />

printmaker for more than<br />

50 years. During that time<br />

he has earned three degrees<br />

in art, including a Master’s Degree in<br />

Photography and a Post Graduate Degree<br />

in Graphics. He has also taught art on the<br />

secondary and college levels, and operated<br />

his own Gallery and Framing operation in<br />

<strong>Westchester</strong> County, New York. His artwork<br />

has sold in Galleries throughout the world<br />

and has been seen in numerous shows and<br />

Museums and private collections. When,<br />

in the 70’s he operated his own Atelier<br />

he did master printing for artists such<br />

as LeRoy Neiman and Salvador Dali. He<br />

now specializes in landscape, nature and<br />

panoramic images. 

<br />

C.C.Cole is a Dark Fantasy writer from<br />

rural Mississippi who lives in the suburbs<br />

with her family. Besides writing, other<br />

interests include medieval and 20th<br />

century history, martial arts, and adopted<br />

greyhounds.<br />


<br />


<br />

t<br />

(h<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


<br />


At
30,
<br />

policem<br />

p<br />

af<br />

S. M<br />

printm<br />

has ear<br />

Degree<br />

Graphic<br />

college le<br />

Framing o<br />

His artwor<br />

and has bee<br />

Museums an


Page 16 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

WRITERS COLLECTION<br />

“What are you doing here?” I said sternly. “Officer,<br />

I’m assigned here by the owner to watch<br />

the place when it’s closed,” he countered, inching<br />

toward me. “Stay right there!” I demanded, backing<br />

up slightly. “Officer you got it all wrong,” he<br />

persisted. “I’m here to keep the place from being<br />

robbed.” “Yeah, and the owner locks you in here<br />

and locks the front gate too, I suppose,” I said<br />

incredulously. “Yes, officer, that’s the truth. He<br />

opens in the morning, pays me for the night and<br />

I leave,” he said, eyeing the weapon in my hand.<br />

I forced him at gunpoint to the front of<br />

the store where my partner was peeking at us<br />

BOOKS<br />

<strong>The</strong> Retired (Try To) Strike Back<br />

Chapter 47 – An Honest Decision<br />

By ALLAN LUKS<br />

Myron’s campaign for City<br />

Council emphasized how seniors<br />

especially appreciate the<br />

importance of bringing people<br />

closer together, and that senior<br />

candidates would work toward<br />

this goal. But with his election<br />

loss, reporters ask if he will run<br />

again and would he concentrate on the same large<br />

message or focus instead on local issues, as his opponent<br />

did.<br />

To discuss whether to try again, Myron, and<br />

his closest friends, meet this morning in a small<br />

diner, where more than three years ago, they decided<br />

to do <strong>The</strong> Retired Person’s Dating Film, to<br />

help lonely seniors go out and meet other people.<br />

Myron and his six friends are at a large round<br />

table in the back of the diner, which isn’t busy at<br />

10 a.m. Most sit slouched, as if silently agreeing<br />

that they deserve to rest after the just completed<br />

campaign.<br />

“I’m willing to announce I’ll run again if you,<br />

my closest advisors, aren’t too tired,” Myron says.<br />

“And if we feel comfortable with what our campaign<br />

stood for.”<br />

Myron holds a cup of coffee, as if to further<br />

make sure his friends feel relaxed, that he’s not<br />

pressing them.<br />

“To be true to ourselves,” says Bob, “we have<br />

to have the strength for another run. To keep attention<br />

on our message.”<br />

“Bob,” his wife, Joan says, “tell everyone about<br />

both of us perhaps directing the commercials.”<br />

“Honestly, that’s not why I’m pushing,” says<br />

Bob. “You tell.”<br />

Joan pauses. “Two advertising agencies,<br />

which knew Bob and me when we worked, contacted<br />

us about possibly directing commercials<br />

using seniors as spokespersons because of the increased<br />

public awareness of the need of seniors to<br />

be honest. Some of this awareness has come from<br />

our group’s efforts. Obviously, the agencies, if they<br />

select us, would get publicity from our being part<br />

of Myron’s run for City Council—“<br />

“Myron, you know I don’t want you to keep<br />

the campaign going in order for Joan and me be<br />

picked to do these spots,” says Bob.<br />

Myron nods. “I appreciate that.”<br />

“Steven interrupts, “A few weeks ago I spoke<br />

at a social workers meeting about how our campaign<br />

has affected my thinking. I told them I<br />

better appreciate the importance, but also the<br />

through the window. “Lie down and put your<br />

hands behind your back,” I ordered. “Officer,<br />

you’re making a big mistake,” he said indignantly,<br />

as he looked toward my partner, then back at me.<br />

“You have no right to treat me this way and I’m<br />

going to sue you.” He had a look of desperation<br />

that made his thick biceps appear even more<br />

formidable. “I suppose you didn’t have much<br />

trouble bending those bars,” I said, putting a<br />

few more steps between us. “But muscles don’t<br />

make you bulletproof, so I suggest that you hit<br />

the deck.” After a few more prowl cars pulled up<br />

outside with their roof lights spinning, my recalcitrant<br />

prisoner finally decided to take a prone<br />

position. Yet, he continued to assure me that I<br />

was mistaken about him being a burglar and it<br />

would all be cleared up when the owner arrived.<br />

Not wanting to be grabbed by those powerful<br />

arms, I didn’t bother cuffing him, but just kept<br />

him in my sights until the door was ultimately<br />

opened by the proprietor. It wasn’t until the room<br />

was flooded with cops and a grateful owner that<br />

the garrulous interloper ended his, “my rights are<br />

being violated” shtick. It was just another lesson<br />

learned; never let your guard down, because the<br />

criminal mind is very cunning and will say and<br />

difficulty, of getting people together to talk about<br />

public problems and recognize their connection<br />

to these issues and each other. Our campaign’s<br />

Talk Centers are a wonderful model, but their attendance<br />

is still low. And I also realize social work<br />

organizations are like people. Charities just worry<br />

about all the disadvantaged they al<strong>read</strong>y help under<br />

their roof. <strong>The</strong>y don’t see how they have time<br />

to advocate for breakthrough efforts in helping<br />

others.<br />

“Two young social workers challenged me<br />

for even bringing up this thinking. <strong>The</strong>y said I’d<br />

forgotten how hard it was just to keep up with all<br />

they were doing now. To even talk about something<br />

that couldn’t realistically happen—that<br />

wasn’t an honest idea.”<br />

“<strong>The</strong>y’re dishonest in calling our insights dishonest,”<br />

says Bob. “That’s why we have to try to<br />

keep the public focused on our goals. We have to<br />

have the strength for another campaign.”<br />

Mimi suddenly stands. “It’s my husband’s<br />

decision whether to run again. But the Senior<br />

Women’s Marches, which our campaign<br />

launched, are now in several cities, calling on<br />

people to meet, talk about public problems, and<br />

use their example to force politicians to cooperate.<br />

Steven’s right, attendance at the Talk Centers is<br />

still small. But if our campaign ends, the spotlight<br />

on us dims, then perhaps many marches and Talk<br />

Centers will stop completely.<br />

“When the marches started, we discussed<br />

do anything to escape.<br />

A different topic is addressed weekly on www.<br />

<strong>The</strong>WritersCollection.com. Each participant author,<br />

as well, as guest bloggers, are encouraged to write
on<br />

the chosen topic. <strong>The</strong> intriguing aspect of each of their<br />

efforts is that by infusing their specific mood and / or<br />

genre, we can better appreciate the complexity, frivolity,<br />

or seriousness of the issue they are challenged
to<br />

distill for all our <strong>read</strong>ers to celebrate, critique, or be<br />

cajoled to delve in the joy of writing.<br />

why women live longer than men. Maybe women<br />

have different genes that let them experience less<br />

illness, or have more friends and so less stress,<br />

which also produces better health. Genes exist<br />

to benefit the individual and create a society that<br />

protects the individual. So with the attention now<br />

on seniors, especially senior women, maybe society<br />

is <strong>read</strong>y to change from ideas and feelings that<br />

seniors can offer.<br />

“Myron, if you have the strength for another<br />

campaign, so do I,” says Mimi, as she walks to Myron’s<br />

chair, leans over and kisses the top of his head.<br />

Five other “yes’s” are heard from around the<br />

table, and the friends shake hands, hug.<br />

“<strong>The</strong>n I will,” says Myron. “But all your confident<br />

talk about the truthfulness of our campaign.<br />

That our campaign brings out what’s important. I<br />

still wonder: Is continuing to tell people that they<br />

need to become closer, a campaign that voters<br />

honestly want?”<br />

Send me you experiences: This column tells the story of<br />

four retired couples, who want to show that seniors are<br />

vital and discover that they also can offer new leadership<br />

to society. Each column is based on conversations<br />

I’ve had with seniors and non-seniors. I’ve heard from<br />

many of you, and encourage other <strong>read</strong>ers to contact me<br />

with their related experiences so I can include them in<br />

the remaining columns about the retired’s story as they<br />

(try to) strike back. Direct email to allan@allanluks.<br />

com.<br />

No Guarantees: One Man’s Road Through the Darkness of Depression<br />

Chapter 34 – <strong>The</strong> Past as Prologue<br />

By BOB MARRONE<br />

In all of sports, nothing can compare<br />

to the feeling of scoring a<br />

goal in a serious hockey game. You<br />

might not believe this, but more<br />

than one player has expressed that<br />

it is as good, or better, than sex. As<br />

for me, I will take the fifth. I have<br />

never really tried to analyze it, but<br />

I will try to do so now.<br />

In addition to the normal competitive<br />

achievement of racking up a scoring “point,” there<br />

is the matter of overcoming serious obstacles.<br />

First, it is hard enough to control a puck at the<br />

other end of a four foot, or longer, wooden stick,<br />

while on skates. Throw in that there are five guys<br />

on the other side who are trying to get in your<br />

way, have a vested interest in hurting you and<br />

who make it very clear through their words and<br />

actions that they are intent on doing so. Add that<br />

the sixth guy, who is dressed with enough padding<br />

and blocking equipment so as to look like a cross<br />

between the Michelin Man and a garage door…<br />

but who also possesses the quickness of a cat…<br />

whose sense of manhood is tied to stopping you<br />

from getting the puck past him. It is very hard.<br />

Moreover, scoring a goal releases the buildup of<br />

competitive and flight or fight tension that is the<br />

fuel of an average hockey player. When you score,<br />

especially against the best and the toughest, it is<br />

the ultimate conquest.<br />

Under the guidance of my new life mentor,<br />

father figure and coach, I blossomed into the best<br />

goal scorer on a man’s team in the top and meanest<br />

amateur league around. I was only sixteen years<br />

old. In my first year of organized hockey I led my<br />

team in scoring. For a kid that had been behind<br />

the eight ball, athletically, and not particularly<br />

tough this was better than any dream come true.<br />

But there was a cost.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first fight I was part was otherworldly for<br />

me. One of my teammates engaged in a simple<br />

toe-to-toe scrap that he soon lost. As the other<br />

player fell on top of him players from both sides<br />

went in to break it up, or so I thought. It was<br />

before the third man in rule (enacted to prevent<br />

wholesale brawls, whereby even the third player<br />

entering a fight, even to break it up is thrown out<br />

of the game), though, and the unwritten rule, often,<br />

was that the team winning the fight kept everyone<br />

else out, and the guys from the losers side<br />

tried to stop it.<br />

As I approached the scrum I felt a loud thud<br />

to the side of my then helmetless head, which<br />

seems to make more noise than it did pain. At<br />

the exact same time, my body was slammed uncontrollably<br />

from my right. I flew to my left like<br />

a ragdoll, the left side of my head slamming into<br />

poll that held up the chicken wire fence around<br />

the rink. It made a loud pong, as I recoiled backwards<br />

onto the deck. <strong>The</strong> guy who ran me into<br />

the fence jumped on me and started to punch me<br />

more, swinging wildly, as I tried to cover up.<br />

Continued on page 17


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 17<br />

BOOKS<br />

No Guarantees: One Man’s Road Through the Darkness of Depression<br />

Continued from page 16<br />

Finally, the players and referee sorted it all out.<br />

As for me, I had a lump on either side of my head,<br />

and vague sense of d<strong>read</strong> about this sport I loved.<br />

I also felt good. To be in a fight, win or lose, unless<br />

of course you got really hurt, was something to be<br />

proud of in Brooklyn in 1966. As I think about it,<br />

though, I was proud of the “notion’ that I had been<br />

in a brawl. But I was frightened by it, a reality that<br />

I dare never admitted and that made me, at times,<br />

hate that part of myself. What a conundrum?<br />

Here I was the best player on the team, but inside<br />

a mild mannered Clark Kent who obsessed about<br />

being tough enough.<br />

What you <strong>read</strong> about contact sports is true.<br />

Once you get hit the first time, you are no longer<br />

nervous or afraid. And at 140 pounds and barely<br />

five foot seven, I got hit often. I did not mind that<br />

part of the game, unless a match deteriorated into<br />

a gang fight on skates. As a “skill” player, these<br />

games were not always my best moments. Sometimes<br />

I was totally into it and motivated to beat<br />

the other team. At other times I wished I were on<br />

another planet.<br />

It bothered me that I was not like what I<br />

thought the other players were. I felt like a phony<br />

and a fraud. I loved being good and I loved the<br />

game, but I did not yet have the kind of fearlessness<br />

and street toughness of most of these other. I<br />

had not reconciled who I was to this beautiful, if<br />

violent sport; that would come many years later.<br />

What I did have was a talent and head for the<br />

game. Fortunately, these assets carried the day, and<br />

I was fortified by the confidence and braggadocio<br />

of my coach.<br />

Over those first few years I played well and<br />

received the bumps, broken noses and bruises<br />

associated with the sport. I also endured or witnessed<br />

some horrific incidents of violence. One<br />

time a team we had beaten regularly decided to<br />

get even by simply attacking us while they were<br />

still on feet.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was no one to help us or stop it, and we<br />

were badly beaten up. Worse still we were humiliated<br />

and scared. Another time I had my mouth<br />

smashed with a baseball bat like swing by the stick<br />

of a defenseman with whom I had an ongoing<br />

feud. I once saw a player on another team get all<br />

of his teeth kicked out courtesy of the same team<br />

that jumped us on feet. Though it all I survived<br />

and even prospered, but I also felt inadequate to<br />

the toughness required.<br />

Hockey was my life and my identity.<br />

About seven years into my hockey life, on an<br />

unusually warm fall day, it all changed. It was the<br />

first game of the season and the puck shot into the<br />

THE ROMA BUILDING<br />

corner. As I had done a thousand of times before,<br />

I scampered to the puck beating the opposing<br />

defenseman. I turned, as I always had, to let him<br />

make the first move to either body check me, or<br />

reach for the puck. I expected, as always, to react<br />

to him and zip around his futile attempt. Nothing,<br />

absolutely nothing happened. It was as if my<br />

talent for holding the puck and reacting had vanished.<br />

I could not even remember what it felt like.<br />

And so it was, that my offensive numbers<br />

dropped, year over year, from 11 goals and 18 assists,<br />

in 18 games, to 1 goal and 4 assists, in the<br />

same period. My hands were gone. This rapid<br />

decline opened the door to ridicule, rejection, and<br />

self hate, the likes of which I had never felt before,<br />

or so I thought.<br />

Bob Marrone is the host of the Good Morning <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

with Bob Marrone, heard from Monday to<br />

Friday, from 6 – 8:30 a.m., on WVOX-1460 AM.<br />

Yonkers Resident Mohammed Razani’s New Book Focuses on Where Earth and Space Technologies Meet<br />

A young boy growing up in Iran, Mohammad<br />

Razani was fascinated with space travel and its<br />

potential to benefit humans. His passion has<br />

shaped his career and his scholarship, inspiring the<br />

publication of his new book, “Information, Communication,<br />

and Space Technology” (CRC Press,<br />

<strong>2012</strong>).<br />

His new book breaks ground in a previously<br />

unexplored area -- the juncture of information<br />

communications technology (ICT) and space<br />

technology. No single book until now has focused<br />

on the integration of these two areas, its impact<br />

on human life, and the implications for our future,<br />

according to Razani, who is chairperson of the<br />

Department of Electrical and Telecommunications<br />

Engineering Technology at New York City<br />

College of Technology (City Tech) of <strong>The</strong> City<br />

University of New York.<br />

Not a textbook, “Information, Communication,<br />

and Space Technology” is useful for students,<br />

professionals and anyone eager to know about<br />

existing and emerging trends in ICT and space<br />

technology. <strong>The</strong> book also reveals some surprising<br />

applications of the combined forces of ICT<br />

and space technology in education, government,<br />

healthcare, the environment, commerce, agriculture<br />

and employment. Developments in space<br />

technology also enable advances in navigation and<br />

nanotechnology. Says Razani, “In pharmaceutical<br />

sciences and medicine, for example, space-based<br />

research has helped develop new cancer treatment<br />

drugs.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> author’s rare combination of expertise<br />

provides his unique perspective. Razani, who<br />

grew up in Tehran and now lives in Yonkers,<br />

has over three decades of research and hands-on<br />

experience in electrical engineering, telecommunications,<br />

satellite communications, microwave<br />

remote sensing and ICT, and is a founding member<br />

of City Tech’s recently established Center for<br />

Remote Sensing and Earth System Sciences.<br />

For more than 12 years, Razani was vice<br />

chairman of several study groups at the International<br />

Telecommunication Union (ITU), the<br />

United Nations specialized agency which coordinates<br />

shared global use of the radio spectrum,<br />

promotes international cooperation in assigning<br />

satellite orbits, works to improve telecommunication<br />

infrastructure in developing countries and<br />

establishes worldwide standards.<br />

He also formerly managed the Satellite<br />

Communications Department of the Telecommunication<br />

Company in Iran. Previously, while<br />

teaching in the graduate electrical engineering<br />

program at Amir Kabir Technical University in<br />

Tehran, he also was CEO of Satellite Equipment<br />

Production and Services (SEPAS), which<br />

provided design and installation of satellite dish<br />

antennas. (“Sepas” in Persian means “thank you.”)<br />

Yet Razani’s initial attraction to the idea<br />

of space travel was inspired by a tenth-century<br />

Persian poet. “I first became interested in space<br />

through a story by Hakim Ferdowsi about Kai<br />

Kawus, an ancient Persian king,” says Razani. “He<br />

wanted to invade heaven with a flying craft.”<br />

Where the king failed, NASA succeeded. Its<br />

research laboratories have generated such ideas as<br />

“rocketless” spacecraft launches and a global energy<br />

distribution system using satellites to collect<br />

solar energy, then transmit it to different locations<br />

worldwide through microwave beams.<br />

Razani’s book discusses that agency’s future<br />

plans for space-based action in robotics, telerobotics<br />

and systems for life support, habitation, sensing<br />

and thermal management.<br />

“Space technology creates a stronger platform<br />

for scientific advancements,” explains Razani,<br />

“including some research that cannot be<br />

performed on Earth. <strong>The</strong> International Space<br />

Station provides an environment that facilitates<br />

research and experiments in medicine, biology,<br />

engineering, material science, fundamental physics,<br />

firefighting, climate, automobile fuel efficiency<br />

and other fields.”<br />

Though many applications of space technology<br />

al<strong>read</strong>y are in use by the general population,<br />

such as weather forecasting, telemedicine, distance<br />

education and location finding through Global<br />

Positioning Satellite (GPS) systems, Information,<br />

Communication, and Space Technology gives a<br />

window into seemingly unlimited possibilities for<br />

improving life on Earth.<br />

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Continued on page 18


Page 18 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

BOOKS<br />

Mohammed Razani’s Book Focuses on Where Earth and Space Technologies Meet<br />

Continued from page 17<br />

Dr. Razani joined the City Tech faculty in<br />

2001. Currently, he teaches a course titled “Satellite<br />

Transmission,” in addition to performing the duties<br />

of chairperson of his department. He also is the<br />

author of a Farsi (Persian) language book, “Satellite<br />

Communications: Principles and Applications.”<br />

THE SPOOF<br />

Bubba Watson, Dr. Watson, and IBM Computer Watson Star in New TV Show<br />

By GAIL FARRELLY<br />

It’s a Reality Show. Its name, you ask? <strong>The</strong> Three<br />

Watsons, of course!<br />

Early reports say that the three<br />

celebs are having a difficult<br />

time getting along with each<br />

other. No problem, experts say,<br />

as controversy fuels Reality TV.<br />

But maybe not this much controversy.<br />

EYE ON THEATRE<br />

Mixed-Up Bag<br />

By JOHN SIMON<br />

<strong>The</strong> Pulitzer Prize-winning<br />

play Clybourne Park has moved<br />

to Broadway. I didn’t care for<br />

it Off Broadway, and it hasn’t<br />

changed since. But Broadway<br />

confers a certain dubious luster,<br />

like a set of expensive clothes on<br />

a nondescript individual.<br />

<strong>The</strong> play by Bruce Norris is not totally without<br />

interest. He can write funny lines, sometimes<br />

even funny sequences. <strong>The</strong> title designates a fictional<br />

Chicago white neighborhood to which<br />

black characters from Lorraine Hansberry’s A<br />

Raisin in the Sun have moved. <strong>The</strong> basic idea is<br />

that in 1959 (Act One) whites resent blacks moving<br />

in, whereas in 2009, in the same house, blacks<br />

resent whites taking over.<br />

Norris depends too much on a number of<br />

tricks. Thus in 1959 people are discussing unusual<br />

nomeclature for geographical locations—Naples<br />

and Neapolitan, Moscow and Muscovite, etc.—<br />

whereas in 2009, the discussion, equally otiose, is<br />

about what are the capitals of distant countries.<br />

Other tricks: people leaving a sentence, or just a<br />

word, unfinished; people stutteringly repeating a<br />

simple word several times. Sometimes two speakers<br />

bat a word back and forth; always there is one<br />

knowledgeable person and one ignorant one persistent<br />

in ignorance. Or someone mouths racist<br />

platitudes in the presence of blacks, over the protests<br />

of a more enlightened character. Or a racist<br />

joke is repeated at the wrong time. <strong>The</strong> play feels<br />

like a succession of such prefabricated devices successively<br />

pulled out of a trunk.<br />

Apropos trunk, another problem. In Act<br />

One, a footlocker containing a war veteran son’s<br />

farewell suicide note to his parents is buried by the<br />

New York City College of Technology (City Tech) of<br />

<strong>The</strong> City University of New York (CUNY) is the<br />

largest public college of technology in New York State.<br />

Located at 300 Jay Street in Downtown Brooklyn,<br />

the College enrolls more than 16,000 students in 62<br />

baccalaureate, associate and specialized certificate programs.<br />

Golf champ Bubba Watson, winner of the<br />

<strong>2012</strong> Masters Tournament, refuses to take off<br />

his green jacket. Apparently he even wears it to<br />

bed, and it’s become quite wrinkled. In addition,<br />

he wants to spend most of the day practicing his<br />

long drives, instead of working on the show. He’s<br />

al<strong>read</strong>y hit his costars and many staff members on<br />

the noggin with wayward golf balls and thinks a<br />

brief mea culpa will set things right. Word is that<br />

several injured workers plan to sue and/or apply<br />

father in the back yard. In Act Two, workers in the<br />

yard unearth the footlocker, and one of them is<br />

<strong>read</strong>ing the note. But why was it buried in the yard<br />

in the first place? And why do we never hear more<br />

of it than “Dear Mom and Dad”?<br />

Norris’s play is almost a sequel to Hansberry’s,<br />

which delights reviewers given a chance to display<br />

their savvy parallels. <strong>The</strong> cast of seven, headed by<br />

Frank Wood, Jeremy Shamos and Annie Parisse,<br />

does well under Pam MacKinnon’s direction on<br />

Daniel Ostling’s idiomatic set, but I find sequels<br />

almost always labored. As a former full-time and<br />

still part-time actor, Norris writes good parts for<br />

actors, and, being a conspicuous liberal, appeals<br />

for extratheatrical reasons to critics and audiences.<br />

But the play remains schematic and predictable.<br />

Do you know what “camp” means? It is,<br />

onstage or off, a hypertheatrical, affected exaggeration,<br />

effete or even effeminate, frequently<br />

involving men in drag. It was invented by homosexuals<br />

by way of indulging a taste for flamboyance,<br />

but leavening it with humor, which is a<br />

beleaguered minority’s way of ingratiating itself to<br />

an unsympathetic majority.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is both sophisticated high camp (e.g.,<br />

Oscar Wilde) and cruder low camp (e.g., Charles<br />

Busch’s Vampire Lesbians of Sodom). It can also<br />

be self-consciously deliberate unintentionally<br />

lapsed into, and, either way, very funny. And now<br />

we have examples of both.<br />

I have found little to like Off Broadway about<br />

Peter and the Starcatcher, a prequel (another<br />

questionable genre) to James M. Barrie’s beloved<br />

Peter Pan. Now on Broadway, it is based on a children’s<br />

novel, which may be less campy than the<br />

semi-musical play derived from it by Rick Elice.<br />

<strong>The</strong> stage production, co-directed by Roger Rees<br />

and Alex Timbers, seems campier even than the<br />

script, reveling in both reductio ad absurdum and<br />

overstatement.<br />

We get such things as two ships, one fast<br />

YPL’s Riverfront Book Club May Meeting<br />

YONKERS, NY—<strong>The</strong> next meeting<br />

of the Riverfront Book Club will be<br />

Wednesday, May 2 nd at 1:00 pm in the<br />

Yonkers Room, 4 th floor. Join Librarian<br />

Jody Maier in a discussion of Prayers for Sale by<br />

Sandra Dallas.<br />

for workers’ compensation benefits.<br />

Dr. Watson runs around the set with a magnifying<br />

glass, constantly looking for “clues.” He<br />

won’t do anything at all without first seeking<br />

advice from his mentor, Sherlock Holmes. Since<br />

Holmes is in London, and the show is filmed in<br />

NY, it’s constant telephoning, emailing, and texting.<br />

Oy!<br />

IBM Computer Watson, who claims he<br />

holds all the world’s knowledge on his hard drive,<br />

Christina Kirk and Frank Wood.<br />

Damon Gupton and Crystal A. Dickinson.<br />

and one slow, headed for the same exotic island;<br />

intrigue around two identical trunks with very<br />

different contents; an adventurous English lord<br />

and his savvy 13-year-old daughter, Molly; her<br />

governess, Mrs. Bumbrake, played by a flagrant<br />

male; comic pirates and a funny shipwreck; a male<br />

chorus impersonating mermaids.<br />

Also three captive orphans (one merely<br />

known as Boy) destined for the island’s comic tyrant<br />

as crocodile fodder; a caricature of a ferocious<br />

pirate chief, Black Stache; and one brutal British<br />

tar ludicrously enamored of Mrs. Bumbrake. All<br />

this and more with just passable songs by Wayne<br />

Barker, and some clever movement (i.e., embryonic<br />

choreography) by Steven Hoggert. <strong>The</strong> best<br />

acting (and acrobatics) comes from Christian<br />

Riverfront Library, located at One<br />

Larkin Center, is handicapped accessible.<br />

Parking is available in the nearby<br />

Buena Vista Parking Garage. For more<br />

information, contact Jody Maier, at 914-337-<br />

1500, ext. 492.<br />

listens to all the conversations on the set, does an<br />

instantaneous fact check on them, and corrects<br />

anybody who makes an error about any fact at all,<br />

no matter how minor. Obnoxious!<br />

“What a trio,” a production assistant whined.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Three Watsons? Fuhgeddaboutit! <strong>The</strong> Three<br />

Stooges is more like it.”<br />

Learn more about <strong>The</strong> Farrelly Sisters - Authors:<br />

http://www.farrellysistersonline.com/ on the Internet.<br />

Borle as Black Stache; the weakest and most<br />

charmless, from Adam Chanler-Berat as Boy,<br />

who turns into a highly unlikely Peter Pan.<br />

In Masks Outrageous and Austere, Tennessee<br />

Williams’s last full-length play, over which he<br />

toiled for several years up to his death, has been,<br />

expensively but expendably, mounted. I feel as if<br />

I had been to a different last Williams play every<br />

few years, and can only hope that this one is truly<br />

the lastest. His late plays have all been desperate<br />

gropings by an exhausted, drug-addled mind,<br />

and this one is no exception. It is, moreover, full<br />

of fuzzy echoes of earlier stuff, most egregiously<br />

<strong>The</strong> Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Her Anymore,<br />

Suddenly Last Summer, and Sweet Bird of Youth.<br />

We get a 60 plus billionaire widow, Babe,<br />

who has bought herself a young husband, Billy.<br />

He, in turn, has acquired a young chap, Jerry, who<br />

may be a Harvard student, to carry on with. All<br />

have been mysteriously transported and confined<br />

to an unknown oceanside location, with a waterside<br />

porch as the scene, though the aisles and<br />

some transparencies behind the porch or high<br />

above the sides also figure.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a sinister trio of black-clad, bodymiked,<br />

sun-glassed, near-identical armed men<br />

dictating much of the action; they are known as<br />

the Gideonites and seem to belong to a shadowy<br />

but powerful corporation as its watchdogs. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

is also a campy Mrs. Gorse-Bracken, who claims<br />

to live in a neighboring house that is, however,<br />

invisible. She sings operatic snatches, and leads<br />

on a leash an idiot boy, who can only masturbate<br />

and say “Coo.” A creepy black giant, Mac, also<br />

appears and merely growls; with him is a midget<br />

known as the Interpreter, though he interprets<br />

nothing. <strong>The</strong>re is, further, Babe’s rebarbative<br />

maid, Peg, now having an affair with Joey, a mechanic<br />

at the highway garage, both highway and<br />

Continued on page 19


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 19<br />

EYE ON THEATRE<br />

Mixed-Up Bag<br />

Continued from page 18<br />

GovernmentSection<br />

<strong>The</strong> cast of “Clybourne Park.”<br />

garage also invisible.<br />

Out of these and some characters in video, we<br />

get a plot impossible to follow, and language more<br />

convoluted but as prosaic as a Sears Roebuck catalogue.<br />

David Schweizer, who adapted this farrago,<br />

also directed, but has not managed to make sense<br />

of the proceedings, which come across as unintentional<br />

camp.<br />

<strong>The</strong> character of Babe, a pathetic despot who<br />

lives on drugs, booze and fantasies, is, of course,<br />

the aged playwright thrashing about, and could<br />

perhaps be made mildly interesting by a grander<br />

actress than Shirley Knight. <strong>The</strong> rest, some better<br />

than others, should not be judged by their roles,<br />

ranging from rehash to rubbish. Williams deserves<br />

an R.I.P. that does not stand for Reviving<br />

Impossible Plays.<br />

Production shots by and courtesy of Joan Marcus.<br />

John Simon has written for over 50 years on theatre,<br />

film, literature, music and fine arts for the Hudson<br />

Review, New Leader, New Criterion, National<br />

Review,New York Magazine, Opera News, Weekly<br />

Standard, Broadway.com and Bloomberg News.<br />

Mr. Simon holds a PhD from Harvard University<br />

in Comparative Literature and has taught at MIT,<br />

Harvard University, Bard College and Marymount<br />

Manhattan College.<br />

To learn more, visit the JohnSimon-Uncensored.com<br />

THE ALBANY CORRESPONDENT<br />

Albany’s Mixed Message on Mixed Martial Arts<br />

Before speaking to the police... call<br />

George Weinbaum<br />

ATTORNEY AT LAW<br />

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By CARLOS GONZALEZ<br />

ALBANY, NY -- <strong>The</strong> political<br />

debate over whether to legalize<br />

mixed martial arts is coming to<br />

a head in Albany, where concerns<br />

over “ultimate fighting,” as it is<br />

often known, may be lessoning.<br />

<strong>The</strong> State Senate passed a<br />

bill on Wednesday, <strong>April</strong> 18, <strong>2012</strong>, that would<br />

make New York the 46th state to allow the sport<br />

of mixed martial arts (MMA).<br />

<strong>The</strong> passage was the third consecutive year<br />

that the Senate approved the sport. In the Assembly,<br />

the measure has died each year in committee.<br />

Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver this year<br />

has said that, even though he thinks the sport is<br />

violent and sets a bad example, it can al<strong>read</strong>y be<br />

seen on television in New York, so legalizing it<br />

could allow the state to influence the sport’s safety<br />

practices.<br />

“We may be better off having strict regulation,”<br />

said Mr. Silver.<br />

Behind the scenes, members of the Democratic<br />

majority in the Assembly remains split over<br />

mixed martial arts.<br />

Assemblyman Bob Reilly, a Democrat from<br />

the capital region who has been the chief opponent<br />

of legalizing mixed martial arts, is concerned<br />

the fighting is too barbaric.<br />

“If the rules were changed and the violence<br />

were taken out, then I would find it acceptable, ”<br />

said Reilly.<br />

But Mr. Reilly is retiring this year, along with<br />

a barrage of other highly influential members leaving<br />

the Assembly, such as Majority Leader Ron<br />

Canastrari, and Assemblyman John J. McEneny,<br />

Chair of the Assembly Steering Committee. Optimism<br />

is increasing because the new chief sponsor<br />

of the bill, Assemblyman Joseph Morelle, a<br />

Monroe County Democrat, has brought in newer<br />

members who tend to be more open to the sport.<br />

Locally, and when asked if she was in favor<br />

of MMA in New York, Assemblywoman Shelley<br />

Mayer (D-Yonkers) remains open-minded.<br />

“I’m open to a discussion on it,” said Mayer.<br />

Her comment is not a Mayer endorsement,<br />

as it shouldn’t be at this point. However, she is<br />

a new member to the Assembly and it does<br />

demonstrate a growing culture of newly elected<br />

officials willing to comprehensively examine legislation<br />

before developing a wall of resistance.<br />

It should also be noted that Mayer does come<br />

to the table with a bit of experience on the MMA<br />

bill, since she served for years as general counsel<br />

and advising Senate Democrats.<br />

As of today, the lobbying continues. Zuffa, the<br />

Ultimate Fighting Championship’s (U.F.C.) parent<br />

company, has made nearly $270,000 in contributions<br />

to New York lawmakers over the past four<br />

years, and spent over $2 million on lobbying over<br />

the past five years. Zuffa has donated $92,800 to<br />

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, $5,500 to Mr. Morelle;<br />

and $3,000 to Senator Joseph A. Griffo, a Republican<br />

from Utica who sponsored the Senate bill. It<br />

also has contributed tens of thousands of dollars to<br />

the state’s Democratic committee.<br />

So what’s the strength behind the opposition?<br />

Unions.<br />

For years, a well-financed union known as<br />

Culinary Workers Union in Las Vegas has been<br />

locked in a bitter feud with Zuffa’s owners, the<br />

brothers Lorenzo J. Fertitta and Frank J. Fertitta<br />

III, because they run a chain of non-unionized<br />

hotels in Las Vegas.<br />

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<strong>The</strong> UFC contends that the Culinary Workers<br />

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New York unions to stymie efforts.<br />

Last year, the Hotel and Motel Trades Council<br />

sent a opposing memorandum on the MMA<br />

bill stating the U.F.C. created a monopoly and<br />

penned “abusive contract terms with fighters.”<br />

In Albany, nothing is more gratifying to opposition<br />

forces who are able to kill a bill in committee.<br />

Truth is, I’m not sure on what’s more<br />

violent; the sport of MMA, or politics.<br />

However, forget the growing fan base, forget<br />

www.citycarting.net<br />

the economic opportunities, ticket sales, tourism,<br />

direct and indirect jobs created from a rising sport.<br />

Mixed martial arts is legal in 45 states, and as far as<br />

the Assembly is concerned fans, jobs, and revenue<br />

can go elsewhere.<br />

Before you weigh an opinion, just remember<br />

that in New York, amateur matches are allowed<br />

but not professional matches.<br />

Makes sense? No.<br />

And this is coming from a person like myself<br />

who is not a fan of the sport, and would probably<br />

never attend a venue. It doesn’t mean that New<br />

York should be closed for business.<br />

Share your thoughts with Carlos Gonzalez, <strong>The</strong> Albany<br />

Correspondent, by directing email to carlgonz1@gmail.com.<br />

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Page 20 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

MAYOR Marvin’s COLUMN<br />

Savoring Spring<br />

By MARY C. MARVIN<br />

I thought I would take a week<br />

off from discussing our <strong>2012</strong>-<br />

2013 budget deliberations<br />

because it is frankly grim and<br />

instead highlight the many,<br />

many positive things going on<br />

in the Village as we savor this<br />

beautiful Spring.<br />

Our library, recently a source of turmoil, is<br />

now humming thanks to the yeoman efforts of<br />

our Library Board and the able stewardship of<br />

our Interim Director, Linda Smith-Shearer. <strong>The</strong><br />

search committee is working hard to have a permanent<br />

director on board by June. <strong>The</strong> pool of applicants<br />

is impressive, bountiful and experienced<br />

as many, many people desire to work in Bronxville.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Village Chamber of Commerce also recently<br />

experienced a change in leadership. Peggy<br />

Conway, Cornell grad and mother of four has<br />

stepped down as Executive Director and Susan<br />

Miele of nearby Chester Heights has taken the<br />

helm. Peggy’s tenure was distinguished by her<br />

energy, her personal connection with our merchants<br />

and her unfailing advocacy for the business<br />

district at Village Hall. Susan Miele is al<strong>read</strong>y at<br />

work having met with Chamber officials and<br />

community members at a “Meet and Greet” in<br />

late March. Susan’s official first day on the job was<br />

<strong>April</strong> 2 nd and we wish her much success during<br />

these challenging times.<br />

GOVERNMENT<br />

Our Planning Board Chairman, Donald<br />

Henderson, is stepping down as he is moving out<br />

of the Village. Don was an extremely able Chairman<br />

known for his calm demeanor and ability to<br />

bring consensus to very complex issues. We thank<br />

him for his 15 plus years of impeccable service to<br />

our Village. We are greatly indebted to Planning<br />

Board member Eric Blessing for agreeing to take<br />

on the Chairmanship role.<br />

Our Memorial Day parade planning is al<strong>read</strong>y<br />

underway. Our Grand Marshal this year<br />

will be WWII veteran and former POW George<br />

Palmer. We have also endeavored to foster a greater<br />

veteran emphasis at our annual event. To that<br />

end, we have been working closely with our Town<br />

veterans’ organizations.<br />

As you walk or drive around the Village,<br />

you may have noticed the sandwich board signs<br />

encouraging folks to sign up for our Village e-<br />

alert messaging system. <strong>The</strong> brainchild of former<br />

Trustee Bill Barton, the temporary signs have<br />

yielded tremendous results. Between March 1 st<br />

and <strong>April</strong> 14 th , 61 new e-alert subscribers joined<br />

our system, <strong>26</strong> of whom signed up just last week<br />

and another 13 enrolled over the weekend. We<br />

now have 1,915 e-mail addresses receiving real<br />

time messages from Village Hall. <strong>The</strong> signs<br />

will soon be moved to various other locations<br />

throughout the Village to ensure full coverage.<br />

You can also subscribe to the e-alert service by<br />

going to the Village website at www.villageofbronxville.com<br />

In reviewing the Village budget, we realized<br />

that our two recreational venues of tennis and<br />

CAMPAIGN TRAIL<br />

<strong>The</strong> Announcement Speech<br />

By DIANE DiDONATO ROTH<br />

A hundred years ago in the foothills of Frosinone,<br />

Italy, a dream began with the humble hopes of Julian<br />

and Eugenia DiDonato. <strong>The</strong>ir dream was to<br />

one day raise a family in a country with inherited<br />

God given freedoms… A community instilled<br />

with faith, family values, and a sense of purpose…<br />

and to follow a promise that with hard work, determination<br />

and personal responsibility, there was<br />

no dream their children and grandchildren could<br />

not realize.<br />

That country is America; that community is<br />

<strong>Westchester</strong>, and that dream is being realized today<br />

as I announce my candidacy for the New York<br />

State Senate.<br />

Three generations later, the story of my family,<br />

like yours, is truly an American story… But<br />

even more, it is truly a <strong>Westchester</strong> story… A<br />

story of faith, family and friends… As a life-long<br />

resident of <strong>Westchester</strong>, I grew up in Pelham, as<br />

the youngest daughter of Anthony and JoAnne<br />

DiDonato, attended St. Catherine’s Grammar<br />

School, Maria Regina High School and received<br />

a degree from Iona College.<br />

Today I sit as an elected member of the<br />

Town Board in North Castle, which covers North<br />

White Plains, Armonk and Banksville... North<br />

Castle is my home, where I live with my Husband<br />

Tom, my daughter Holly and son Tommy… My<br />

Mom JoAnne, (who’s here today) currently lives<br />

in Rye Brook and my brother Julian DiDonato<br />

lives in Eastchester where he runs the youth soccer<br />

program that touches over 15,000 families<br />

every year… Yes, my family’s story is truly a <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

story.<br />

Which is why it saddens me to no end to<br />

travel around this district and see how the failed<br />

policies of recent years have had a crushing effect<br />

on our neighborhood’s and town squares, from<br />

Yonkers to Eastchester, Harrison, to Bedford and<br />

New Rochelle to Mamaroneck… <strong>The</strong>re are far<br />

too many signs that <strong>read</strong>: “For Sale” or “For Rent”<br />

– and not enough signs that say “Help Wanted.”<br />

Even worse, there are storefronts that don’t have<br />

any signs at all, because they are completely bordered-up…<br />

More than I can remember in my life.<br />

Here in <strong>Westchester</strong>, we live in one of the<br />

most heavily-taxed and expensive places in the<br />

country…Jobs are lost… Innovation is stifled…<br />

and hard working families and businesses gave up<br />

on the area and simply move out.<br />

I am running for State Senate because we can<br />

do better!... And we must!<br />

I am running to End Albany’s Tax and<br />

Spend Insanity… Our children’s future depends<br />

on our ability to behave in Albany like we do<br />

around our kitchen table: spending less than we<br />

make and resist the urge to live off our credit cards.<br />

paddle operated at a combined $27,000 deficit,<br />

which is a significant shortfall. Going forward,<br />

we will be obliged to ensure that those using our<br />

courts have purchased the necessary permits as it<br />

appears use does not match permit sales. Otherwise,<br />

in order to make these activities even close to<br />

self-sustaining, permit fees will need to be raised<br />

appreciably. I welcome resident feedback with<br />

suggestions relating to the operation of our recreation<br />

programs.<br />

A call from the Federal Emergency Management<br />

Agency this past week brought us yet a step<br />

closer to the Phase I flood mitigation funding for<br />

the engineering and design phase of our pending<br />

grant application. If we receive this Federal grant,<br />

it has an unprecedented 75% Federal match for<br />

every dollar spent. This is a truly collaborative<br />

endeavor with our school officials as we work<br />

hand-in-hand to secure these monies. <strong>The</strong> project<br />

includes the construction of water detention<br />

tanks, automated pumps and storm water piping<br />

between the school grounds and the Bronx River.<br />

<strong>The</strong> project continues to receive scrutiny and fine<br />

tuning from a number of eyes including State and<br />

Federal professionals and School and Village engineers.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Sagamore Park refurbishment is underway.<br />

Sadly, in order to construct the handicap accessible<br />

pathway, several trees had to be removed.<br />

Though not in good health, nonetheless, we tried<br />

very hard to avoid their removal. We will be replanting<br />

in the area in June. We expect the park<br />

renovation to be completed by Memorial Day.<br />

In just a few weeks, our police department<br />

I am running to Fight for Women and<br />

Working Moms… Right now, almost every major<br />

decision that affects our State is made by the<br />

Governor, the Senate Leader, and the Speaker of<br />

the Assembly, all career politicians, all men. We<br />

must shatter that glass ceiling and make sure that<br />

working moms are heard on tax reduction, job<br />

creation, our children’s future and strengthening<br />

our fiscal footing.<br />

And I run to Grow our Small Businesses…<br />

<strong>The</strong>y are the backbone of our community… As<br />

a small businesswoman and local elected official<br />

I know personally how taxes and over regulation<br />

kills small businesses. <strong>The</strong> next wave of job creation<br />

can only come when government gets out<br />

of the way.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se are issues that affect my family, friends<br />

and constituents on a daily basis.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se are issues that (unlike my primary opponent)<br />

I didn’t have to move into a new district<br />

will have a second License Plate Reader (LPR)<br />

functioning on a second patrol car. <strong>The</strong> plate <strong>read</strong>er<br />

has not only generated funds for the Village,<br />

but most importantly, it is an anti-crime tool as it<br />

alerts our police officers to the presence of vehicles<br />

in our community that may have been involved in<br />

criminal activity. <strong>The</strong> system has also been instrumental<br />

in apprehending wanted criminals.<br />

Our Avalon commuter parking lot is now<br />

open for free public parking every Saturday and<br />

Sunday from 7AM until 3AM for the convenience<br />

of our residents and shoppers. Our hope is<br />

that our west side restaurants will benefit from the<br />

added availability. We plan to open the lot for free<br />

parking from 7PM to 10PM on weeknights once<br />

appropriate signage has been secured and posted.<br />

Please make note of an important change of<br />

date. <strong>The</strong> Eastchester Board of Fire Commissioners<br />

will be meeting at Bronxville Village Hall on<br />

<strong>April</strong> 24 th at 7PM, not on <strong>April</strong> 19 th as previously<br />

reported. <strong>The</strong> Fire District’s budget is actually<br />

more than that of Village government, a compelling<br />

reason to become educated as to how a sizable<br />

portion of your tax dollars are spent.<br />

Finally, so much of the beauty you see in the<br />

Village public spaces this spring is thanks to a very<br />

active, generous, and engaged Bronxville Beautification<br />

Council. <strong>The</strong>ir gift of time, labor and funds<br />

is so appreciated.<br />

Mary C. Marvin is the mayor of the Village of<br />

Bronxville, New York. If you have a suggestion or<br />

comment, consider directing your perspective by email<br />

to: mayor@vobny.com.<br />

to understand.<br />

Before I get a chance to square off against<br />

Democrat George Latimer in the general election<br />

and discuss how out of touch his liberal views are<br />

with mainstream values of this community… I<br />

must first face “Scarsdale Bob Cohen” in a primary…<br />

Yep, he’s back… And this time, in a shameful<br />

act of political opportunism, he actually moved<br />

from his long-time hometown of Scarsdale, into<br />

the newly formed 37th district, not because of any<br />

great love of the people or the concern of the communities,<br />

that I have lived in all my life, but rather<br />

for his own political ego and the gain of the special<br />

interests in Albany!<br />

I was warned to stay out of this race… <strong>The</strong><br />

“Old Boys Club” warned me… <strong>The</strong>y said: “How<br />

can you compete with him? He al<strong>read</strong>y has the<br />

endorsements of too many county leaders”… I<br />

say: “I don’t want their endorsements!”… <strong>The</strong> only<br />

endorsements I want are from the people of this<br />

district… <strong>The</strong> people I grew up with!<br />

<strong>The</strong>y said to me: “But he lost the last election<br />

by only a narrow margin, don’t get in this race and<br />

shake things up for him”… Well, this is true. He<br />

did lose the last election by a narrow margin, but<br />

he lost… He’ll remind you that he received 49.5<br />

percent of the vote in the last election and that<br />

this is the voting base he’s working from in this<br />

election cycle… Well, let me tell you something…<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is no such thing as the Cohen “voting<br />

base”!... It doesn’t exist!... Two years ago the anti-<br />

Continued on page 21


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 21<br />

CAMPAIGN TRAIL<br />

<strong>The</strong> Announcement Speech<br />

Continued from page 20<br />

Suzi Oppenheimer vote existed, the anti- Liberal<br />

vote existed, but the “Cohen vote” is a complete<br />

mirage with a foundation built on sand… Two<br />

years ago any Republican would have gotten his<br />

percentage of the vote and a stronger candidate<br />

would have won.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y told me: “that he is the inevitable candidate<br />

for the Republicans and the most electable.”…<br />

I say with my entry into this race and<br />

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT<br />

MOU Approved<br />

Part of Plan for New Rochelle’s Echo Bay<br />

By PEGGY GODFREY<br />

Was the unanimous 7-0 New<br />

Rochelle City Council vote on<br />

the Forest City Residential proposal<br />

for Echo Bay a Hail Mary<br />

pass? While development in<br />

New Rochelle is not a football<br />

game, only the next nine months<br />

will tell whether all the needed information can be<br />

assembled. Forest City Residential’s new MOU<br />

(Memorandum of Understanding) was reduced<br />

from the originally proposed 18 months to nine<br />

months. During this time, the City will receive<br />

environmental and financial analysis from the<br />

developer, but possibly not the Final Draft Environmental<br />

Impact Statement (DEIS). In the next<br />

month the City will request proposals for adaptive<br />

reuse of the Armory.<br />

In the original plan, the Echo Bay site consisted<br />

of approximately 18 to 20 acres with 700<br />

residential units and 100,000 square feet of retail<br />

LABOR<br />

By NANCY KING<br />

<strong>The</strong> City of White Plains has<br />

declared an impasse with the<br />

firefighters union, sending any<br />

further negotiations to binding<br />

arbitration. According to Joe<br />

Carrier, president of the White<br />

Plains Firefighters Union, the<br />

union received a letter from Corporation Counsel<br />

John Callahan who had been handling the negotiations,<br />

advising they were at an impasse. <strong>The</strong><br />

firefighters union believe that the catalyst for the<br />

breakdown in talks emanates from their request<br />

for an independent fiscal study. <strong>The</strong> purpose of<br />

such a study was to determine whether White<br />

Plains is in as serious financial straits as city administration<br />

has claimed it to be. Union officials<br />

for the firefighters allege that they would have<br />

been willing to consider 0% raises and limited<br />

Cohen’s hometown of Scarsdale no longer a factor<br />

in this new district with new demographics, that<br />

he is not only not inevitable… Bob Cohen is not<br />

electable!<br />

So as he travels around this district making<br />

empty promises and giving false hope about reforming<br />

Albany, I as the only elected official and<br />

true conservative in this primary, actually have a<br />

voting record to back up the talk!<br />

I voted against every proposed property tax increase<br />

and will continue to do so when I go to Albany!<br />

and commercial. This was reduced to the approximately<br />

nine acres of the present Public Works<br />

Yard. Only 200-300 apartments and 25,000 to<br />

50,000 square feet of retail and commercial are<br />

now proposed. At this time, a change al<strong>read</strong>y<br />

made in the new proposal was an additional deck<br />

for parking to accommodate the retail projected.<br />

Before the Council voted on <strong>April</strong> 17, <strong>2012</strong>,<br />

Councilman Lou Trangucci stated he felt reducing<br />

the time frame of the MOU from the original<br />

18 months to nine months would give everyone<br />

the opportunity to know the costs of moving the<br />

City Yard, developing the Armory and the Echo<br />

Bay proposal at one time. Councilman Al Tarantino<br />

agreed and felt it would determine where the<br />

City is going, especially regarding the City Yard.<br />

He believes the nine month time frame will work<br />

well. Councilman Jared Rice asked about local<br />

hiring and Abe Naparstek claimed Forest City<br />

Residential would hire locally but also asked for a<br />

definition of local - was it State, New Rochelle or<br />

County? Councilman Ivar Hyden was concerned<br />

about the RFP (Request for Proposals) for the<br />

entire Armory. Councilwoman Shari Rackman<br />

clarified that there were two proposals: one, which<br />

benefit contributions if a report had indicated it<br />

to be so. <strong>The</strong> White Plains Fire Department has<br />

been without a contract since 2010. <strong>The</strong> firefighters<br />

union has also filed suit with the city in regards<br />

to the 7 firefighters hired back under the SAFER<br />

grant obtained by Congresswoman Nita Lowey<br />

back in March of 2011. Under the terms of that<br />

grant, those 7 firefighters have a job for at least<br />

another year. Union officials have complained<br />

in court documents that while they indeed have<br />

their jobs, they have been denied any pay increases<br />

and are victims of unfair labor practices.<br />

White Plains’ divulging the budget impasse<br />

by letter shouldn’t have surprised the firefighters;<br />

their colleagues at the White Plains Police Department<br />

received a similar letter on <strong>April</strong> 13 th .<br />

Like the fire department, the White Plains Police<br />

Department has been without a contract since<br />

2010. <strong>The</strong>y were scheduled to go to the bargaining<br />

table on <strong>April</strong> 25 th … that prospect was quashed<br />

upon receipt of a letter. <strong>The</strong>y are now off to mediation,<br />

as well, to be heard by the New York State<br />

Public Employees Board. PBA President Robert<br />

Riley claims his union scheduled multiple meetings<br />

only to have them canceled by the city.<br />

<strong>The</strong> FY<strong>2012</strong>-2013 Budget for the City of<br />

White Plains has al<strong>read</strong>y reserved $1.4 million<br />

for salary settlements for the police departments,<br />

firefighters and teamsters at the rate negotiated by<br />

the CSEA. That money has been earmarked for<br />

any COLA (cost of living adjustments) for those<br />

union members who are retirees.<br />

White Plains has always been the “pretty<br />

girl” of municipalities fostered by its squeaky<br />

clean hometown image. In recent months<br />

though, it seems to have taken a page from the<br />

playbook of Yonkers, the “city of hills where<br />

nothing is ever on the level.” And at a time when<br />

many municipalities pride themselves for being<br />

transparent in governance, it appears the pretty<br />

I forced all town employees to contribute to<br />

their healthcare premiums.<br />

I capped post-retirement benefits for town<br />

employees and demonstrated real fiscal restraint<br />

by eliminating costly fringe benefits to elected officials<br />

and part-time employees.<br />

I declined to participate in the state pension<br />

plan and declined Town-provided health care, because<br />

we simply could not afford the costs.<br />

I wish I could tell you about “Scarsdale Bob’s”<br />

voting record… But he doesn’t have one… He’s<br />

never been elected to anything and of all the candidates<br />

in this race I am the only one who knows<br />

firsthand how Albany’s policies impact local government.<br />

While being a very nice man. Bob Cohen<br />

is the wrong man. <strong>The</strong> wrong candidate. In the<br />

wrong district.<br />

He had his chance two years ago and the voters<br />

decided… It is now time for others with an<br />

authentic passion for community service and an<br />

iron will of conviction rooted in the <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

values of faith, family and friends, to pick up the<br />

mantle of leadership and carry this party to victory<br />

in November, which I will do!... Send me to<br />

Albany so that together we can continue to fight<br />

for all our <strong>Westchester</strong> stories!<br />

Thank You and God Bless You.<br />

included the Annex of the Armory, and another<br />

without the Annex in the Forest City Residential<br />

proposal. Naparstek clarified that in the “new<br />

plan” the Annex access was removed.<br />

Mayor Noam Bramson expressed his pleasure<br />

with the Council’s unanimous vote and felt<br />

“New Rochelle is back in business” with this new<br />

plan. Naparstek was “ecstatic” with the new plan.<br />

However the need to move the City Yard is still<br />

considered a key element in this decision process<br />

since the City Council must vote for the bonding<br />

necessary to make a move to the proposed Beechwood<br />

Avenue site.<br />

After the meeting, Councilman Albert Tarantino<br />

felt this new agreement gives the Council<br />

the opportunity to bring all the parts of this proposal<br />

together simultaneously. It “allows us to go<br />

forward on the plan for the Armory, City Yard<br />

and Forest City Residential.” When all parts of<br />

the plan are in front of us at one time, the costs<br />

of the Forest City Residential proposal and what<br />

they are willing to pay for will be evident. <strong>The</strong><br />

DEIS will also come back and all costs will be in<br />

front of us.<br />

According to Bob Petrucci, “residents can’t understand<br />

how a project can first be proposed and<br />

now go down the road for an unknown number<br />

of years and still our mayor and his retinue have no<br />

idea how much money the city even ‘might’ make.<br />

<strong>The</strong> developer has an idea, no corporation would<br />

even let it out of the gate and yet this travesty rolls<br />

along. So we have questions. Why exactly and financially<br />

does the mayor like this project, especially<br />

in such miserable economic times and years? No<br />

revenue numbers were ever provided. Before anything<br />

else is done, we urge that the city tell residents<br />

how much money this plan will make for them and<br />

by when. If no one knows now, then why are they<br />

still pushing to do it?”<br />

Ron Tocci, former State Assemblyman and<br />

Co-Chair of the Save Our Armory Committee,<br />

believes this new MOU was a “win-win for<br />

everybody. It will provide the information from<br />

the environmental impact statement (DEIS) that<br />

shows what the Forest City plan is all about and<br />

it gives an opportunity to anyone interested in developing<br />

the Armory to show what they can do<br />

with it.”<br />

Peggy Godfrey is a freelance writer and a former educator.<br />

White Plains City Hall Declares Negotiations Impasse with Unions<br />

girl isn’t pretty at all, she’s just wearing a mask.<br />

Firefighters, police officers, sanitation workers<br />

and all the small little cogs that make the White<br />

Plains wheel turn effortlessly came to the table to<br />

negotiate in good faith. Wouldn’t it be great if the<br />

city administration did so likewise?<br />

Nancy King is a freelance, investigative reporter; a<br />

resident of Greenburgh, New York.


Page 22 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

LEGISLATION<br />

Latimer Bill Named Top Priority by State Environmental Group<br />

ALBANY, NY -- Environmental Advocates<br />

of New York - the top statewide environmental<br />

group that monitors state legislation - has identify<br />

a bill sponsored by <strong>Westchester</strong> Assemblyman<br />

George Latimer (D-Rye) as a “Super Bill”, one<br />

of the highest priority among all proposed legislation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> bill, A.7137, would provide a net increase<br />

in resources allocated to the Environmental<br />

Protection Fund (EPF) used to fund major environmental<br />

projects statewide. It would phase<br />

unclaimed deposits collected by the state through<br />

the Returnable Beverage Container Law from<br />

the General Fund into the EPF over four years.<br />

Assemblyman Latimer co-sponsors the bill<br />

with Republican Senator Mark Grisanti (R-Erie<br />

MEDIA<br />

County), and credited environmental activist and<br />

lawyer J. Henry Neale of Scarsdale for bringing<br />

the concept into consideration. “This proves once<br />

again the value of citizen advocacy in taking a<br />

good idea, and giving it the attention it deserves”,<br />

Latimer said.<br />

In describing the bill, Environmental Advocates<br />

noted that since 2003, approximately $500<br />

million in New York State funds has been swept<br />

from the EPF for General Fund relief; since 2008,<br />

the EPF appropriation has been reduced from<br />

$255 million to $134 million. New revenues are<br />

needed support the many important projects<br />

that protect New York’s families and our shared<br />

environment. Some of those programs include<br />

protecting natural resources and community<br />

character, eliminating solid waste, keeping family<br />

farms working, and preventing pollution and<br />

invasive species.<br />

New York State collects about $115 million<br />

from unclaimed bottle deposits on an annual basis.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se revenues would be phased in over four<br />

years, starting in State Fiscal Year 2013–14. Also,<br />

the bill specifies that this new revenue would not<br />

replace the traditional source of funding for the<br />

EPF but would supplement the current funding<br />

source. This bill would not amend the mechanism<br />

that collects the unclaimed deposits in the current<br />

bottle bill law. Latimer indicated that the revenues<br />

Don’t Let Big Government Choose Your News<br />

By CORYDON B. DUNHAM<br />

A proposed new plan for government control<br />

of television news, and perhaps Internet news, is<br />

now pending before the Federal Communications<br />

Commission. It would enable the government<br />

to suppress opposing points of view, reduce<br />

diversity and chill speech.<br />

<strong>The</strong> new Localism, Balance and Diversity<br />

Doctrine has much in common with the FCC’s<br />

old Fairness Doctrine – a policy the agency itself<br />

found deterred and suppressed news and chilled<br />

speech and which it revoked in 1987. An FCCsponsored<br />

Future of Media Study has recommended<br />

that the Localism Doctrine proceeding<br />

be ended as ill advised but FCC Chairman Julius<br />

Genachowski has refused; the administrator of<br />

the White House’s Office of Information and<br />

Regulatory Affairs, Cass R. Sunstein, has long<br />

recommended that the government regulate<br />

news content broadcast by stations to advance<br />

the incumbent government’s political and social<br />

objectives.<br />

<strong>The</strong> new doctrine would suppress news,<br />

impose unnecessary and heavy burdens on television<br />

station news and be enforced by threats<br />

of license termination from both the FCC and<br />

a local control board at each station. Under the<br />

proposed plan, news broadcast by television stations<br />

would have to satisfy government criteria<br />

for “localism” in production and news coverage<br />

– as well as government criteria for balance and<br />

viewpoint diversity.<br />

Internet news sites stand to be affected as<br />

well. <strong>The</strong> FCC is planning to transfer the broadcast<br />

spectrum used by local television to the<br />

Internet and the agency al<strong>read</strong>y has begun regulating<br />

the Internet.<br />

Five federal communications commissioners<br />

in a central government agency in Washington,<br />

D.C., would review local news. <strong>The</strong> majority<br />

vote of three commissioners appointed by the<br />

president would make a final determination of<br />

news acceptability, overriding the news judgments<br />

of thousands of independent, local TV<br />

reporters and editors. <strong>The</strong> stations would be<br />

threatened with loss of their licenses to broadcast<br />

if found to be non-compliant.<br />

In addition, a local control board would be<br />

appointed for each television station to monitor<br />

its programming, including news, and recommend<br />

against license renewal if board members<br />

concluded the station is not complying with the<br />

FCC policy. This would impose a new blanket<br />

of government control over news. Much of the<br />

proposed new rule has not been made public<br />

including, for example, who would appoint the<br />

members of the local boards.<br />

Requiring journalists to comply with a central<br />

government agency’s policy on how to report<br />

the news and what the news should be means<br />

those journalists would no longer be free and<br />

independent of government. If the broadcast<br />

press is not free and independent, it cannot act<br />

generated by bottle deposit law, which keeps communities<br />

cleaner and encourages recycling, should<br />

be used to benefit state programs to protect our air,<br />

land, and water.<br />

<strong>The</strong> bill is currently in the Assembly Environmental<br />

Conservation Committee and the<br />

Senate Finance Committee. Favorable action is<br />

targeted for this spring.<br />

Latimer has long been a staunch supporter of<br />

the environment, and has often received top scores<br />

from Environmental Advocates for his positions<br />

and votes. Naming this bill a “Super Bill” makes<br />

it a top priority for environmental groups - and<br />

more likely to pass the legislature.<br />

To review Environmental Advocates’s bill<br />

ratings, view their website at www.eany.org<br />

To view the bill on-line, click: www.assembly.<br />

state.ny.us/leg/?bn=A7137<br />

as a watchdog for the public, which is its constitutional<br />

role.<br />

News gathering is not just taking government<br />

handouts; it’s probing sources for what is<br />

really going on. It’s important that the TV and<br />

radio press continue to be able to do that so the<br />

public will be informed. FCC history shows<br />

government regulation of news content deters<br />

and prevents effective news-gathering.<br />

Corydon B. Dunham is a Harvard Law School<br />

graduate. His new book, “Government Control<br />

of News: A Constitutional Challenge,” (http://<br />

freespeech.authorsxpress.com), details the study tracing<br />

the history of the FCC’s Fairness Doctrine and<br />

development of the Localism, Balance and Diversity<br />

Doctrine. As an NBC executive for 25 years,<br />

Dunham oversaw legal and government matters<br />

and Broadcast Standards. He served on the board of<br />

directors of the National Television Academy of Arts<br />

and Sciences and American Corporate Counsel Association.<br />

OP-EDSection<br />

Confusing<br />

Education<br />

with Training<br />

Dear Editor:<br />

I am writing in response<br />

to Larry M. Elkin’s commentary entitled<br />

“High School Does Not Go High Enough” in<br />

the <strong>April</strong> 12, <strong>2012</strong> issue. He focuses on a legitimate<br />

nationwide problem, namely the total overenrollment<br />

of public community colleges across<br />

the United States. However, he makes the all too<br />

common mistake of confusing traditional education<br />

with training, and therefore proposes wrong<br />

remedies to the problem.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fact is that there are currently too many<br />

students enrolled in America’s colleges and universities<br />

not too few. Mr. Elkin acknowledges this<br />

“credentials creep” in noting that for most of the<br />

20th century a high school diploma was a ticket to<br />

a middle class life. Many people assume that the<br />

Associates Degree of today is the High School<br />

Diploma of fifty years ago, but these are two different<br />

degrees offered by institutions created for<br />

different purposes.<br />

<strong>The</strong> college, is steeped in the traditions of the<br />

liberal arts, namely exploration and higher order<br />

thinking. Courses offered are not only extensions<br />

of subjects taken in high school (such as English)<br />

but philosophy, sociology, and other such liberal<br />

arts courses that will mold a young person’s<br />

worldview.<br />

<strong>The</strong> question we need to ask is: how many of<br />

America’s future workers need this education? In<br />

the average Associate Degree program, coursework<br />

is usually evenly divided between the liberal arts<br />

and the student’s choice of major. Do all of these<br />

students need, or can they truly benefit from, what<br />

that year of liberal arts is offering them. My mother<br />

and aunt came out of the NYC public high schools<br />

of the mid 20th century. Both went on to “business<br />

schools” – one to be a secretary and the other<br />

a bookkeeper. Each completed a one year program,<br />

focused entirely on their vocation, at the end of<br />

which they were granted a certificate (not a degree).<br />

To gain those same skills today one would have to<br />

spend two years, and earn an Associate’s Degree in<br />

Administrative Assistantship or Accounting. Is this<br />

extra education worth a full year of potential lost income,<br />

as well as the cost of college tuition (that both<br />

the student and taxpayer share).<br />

What we need is to move the workforce for-<br />

Continued on page 23


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 23<br />

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR<br />

Continued from page 22<br />

ward by taking a step backwards. Let us have a<br />

serious debate about which careers truly demand<br />

a liberal education, and which require enhanced<br />

vocational training. We will find that many careers<br />

will be suited with the enhanced vocational<br />

training. Now whether this “5th year” of education<br />

is offered free through our high schools, the<br />

BOCES system, or a patchwork of private “career<br />

schools” (eligible for the same financial aid programs<br />

that accredited colleges are today), it would<br />

benefit all parties involved. Students could enter<br />

their careers sooner, community colleges would<br />

see their enrollment shrink to more manageable<br />

levels, and liberal arts professors would not be subjected<br />

to classes filled with students who are only<br />

there because their college orders them to be there.<br />

<strong>The</strong> community college could then return to its<br />

original mission of educating those who will go<br />

on to 4-year colleges or higher, or wish to major in<br />

a two year program that requires both the liberal<br />

arts and professional training. In this way, students,<br />

colleges and taxpayers will all benefit.<br />

Evan Frankl, Bronxville/Yonkers, NY 10708<br />

Lack of Support for New<br />

Rochelle City Council<br />

Decision<br />

Editor:<br />

<strong>The</strong> following resolution was passed at the<br />

<strong>April</strong> 17, <strong>2012</strong> meeting of the New Rochelle<br />

Citizens Reform Club:<br />

Whereas, the City Manager of New Rochelle<br />

has stated that membership in ICLEI was<br />

implied because a representative came to speak to<br />

the New Rochelle City Council,<br />

Whereas, the City Council of New Rochelle<br />

has never taken an official vote to join ICLEI,<br />

Whereas, no proven benefits have come to<br />

New Rochelle as a result of this ICLEI membership<br />

which has a cost,<br />

Whereas, the New Rochelle Citizens Reform<br />

Club does not agree with membership in<br />

ICLEI and also with some sections of GreeNR,<br />

Be it resolved, that the New Rochelle Citizens<br />

Reform Club feels a City Council vote<br />

should be taken on the ICLEI membership for<br />

the City of New Rochelle,<br />

Be it further resolved, that the New Rochelle<br />

Citizens Reform Club does not support City<br />

Council decisions made by implication.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Lorraine Pierce, Secretary, New Rochelle<br />

Citizens Reform Club<br />

ED KOCH COMMENTARY<br />

It Is Time to Reexamine the Welfare<br />

Reform Law of 1996<br />

By EDWARD I. KOCH<br />

<strong>The</strong> New York Times of <strong>April</strong><br />

7 th had a magnificent, severalpages-long<br />

article on the effect<br />

the change in welfare programs<br />

throughout the nation has had<br />

on its beneficiaries, mostly women<br />

with children, beginning with<br />

2007, eleven years after the law<br />

was signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996.<br />

<strong>The</strong> major change in welfare policy was to<br />

end cash benefits to recipients after they reached a<br />

5-year limit of welfare coverage. Welfare recipients<br />

continued to be eligible for food stamps, which effectively<br />

became the cash provided to the welfare<br />

recipient who sold the food stamps. <strong>The</strong> Times article,<br />

which was superbly written and researched by<br />

Continued on page 24<br />

Something Happened on<br />

<strong>April</strong> 17th<br />

On <strong>April</strong> 17 th during the New Rochelle<br />

City Council Meeting the Council unanimously<br />

passed a resolution granting Forest City the right<br />

to prepare and present a Memorandum of Understanding<br />

(MOU) in 9 months for the waterfront<br />

property known as Echo Bay.<br />

This came as a big surprise to many members<br />

of the community who felt that enough council<br />

votes existed to turn down this bid. Many voices in<br />

the community opposed this and their voices were<br />

seemingly heard by enough council members to<br />

vote this down. Yet it passed by a 7 to 0 vote and<br />

so, Forest City enjoys a foothold in New Rochelle.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is no need to explicate the track record<br />

of Forest City; <strong>The</strong> <strong>Westchester</strong> <strong>Guardian</strong> and others<br />

have done this for the community. Forest City<br />

have made numerous political contributions, engaged<br />

bogus “consultants” and have offered communities<br />

the use of a moral imperative to not do<br />

business with them at any cost. That may appear<br />

harsh, but the facts are there and yet, all of our<br />

council members including the ceremonial mayor<br />

whose only real operating role in the City via its<br />

Charter is to lead the City Council, voted yea.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y are some reasons to cheer. Apparently<br />

voices in the community, especially those associated<br />

with the committee to save the Armory, are<br />

quite happy with this outcome. Sadly, they appeared<br />

to have forgotten the fact that they al<strong>read</strong>y<br />

had the protection of New York State to ensure<br />

not a brick or piece of mortar be harmed without<br />

State permission. So, while it is understandable<br />

that they cheer, as I do as a veteran, I am still<br />

drawn to the disconnect that loud opposing voices<br />

in the council gave approval.<br />

So, something happened! What happened<br />

is up for conjecture. Did the deal include some<br />

accommodation for the DPW yard? Did it<br />

embrace some other undeveloped piece of landscape?<br />

I myself, offered a plan to build a bridge<br />

across Main Street to connect the thriving small<br />

business block on the other side, a walking bridge<br />

to bind both sub-communities together, and then,<br />

perhaps Davids Island. But, who knows and yet…<br />

Not one council person has stepped up to<br />

address the most pressing need we face as a community<br />

– in terms of decay, misuse, deterioration<br />

- and that is our downtown Main Street business<br />

district. It is a dog’s breakfast of unplanned<br />

development; festering unoccupied buildings,<br />

a creeping invasion by Monroe College, many<br />

storefront churches, or one dollar stores. You can<br />

review the minutes or watch videos of past council<br />

meetings and not one voice offering one thought,<br />

one priority for what once was the crown jewel<br />

of our community, downtown New Rochelle.<br />

Sadly counting the ceremonial mayor, 4 other<br />

council members have businesses, reside or represent<br />

the district and neighborhood boundaries.<br />

<strong>The</strong> remaining two can drive south down North<br />

Avenue from their homes to City Hall to attend<br />

meetings and never have to pass this eyesore or<br />

testimony to neglect and poor governance.<br />

I encourage every citizen of New Rochelle to<br />

visit the neighborhood and ask the simple question<br />

of your council person..... “what are you doing<br />

about this?” I invite every neighbor from other<br />

communities to come to our city and see what it is<br />

that I am talking about. We, in turn, will take a trip<br />

to downtown Mamaroneck and Port Chester to<br />

see how effective governance really works.<br />

Warren Gross, New Rochelle, NY<br />

Israel<br />

New York Post <strong>read</strong>er Henry Mitchel’s letter<br />

begs for answers to a number of questions. How<br />

many American kids died in a war to save Israel?<br />

None. Why did we go to war with Iraq the first<br />

time? To kick Saddam out of Kuwait and the pos-<br />

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sibly inferred threat to Saudi Arabia and protect<br />

our oil supplier. How many American soldiers’<br />

lives were lost in a war with Iran? None. We’ve<br />

never been in a war with Iran. Why isn’t Iran a<br />

threat to us? A nuclear armed Iran can achieve<br />

hegemony in the oil rich Middle East making<br />

the gas lines of 1973 seem like a blip on the<br />

radar screen. Israel’s been in wars of survival in<br />

1948, 1956, 1967, 1973 and 1982; not counting<br />

terrorism and rocket and missile attacks since.<br />

How many American soldiers were sent to aid<br />

Israel in any of those wars? Not even one. Does<br />

Mr. Mitchel have inside information regarding<br />

PM Netanyahu coming here to ask our president<br />

to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities? I seriously doubt<br />

it. When our staunchest ally in the Middle East<br />

knocked out Iraq’s nuclear facilities in the 1980’s<br />

and Syria’s, more recently, did that aid us in the<br />

two Gulf wars? You betcha. We didn’t have to<br />

think about a nuclear counterattack.<br />

Regarding the U.S.S. Liberty, it was a mistake,<br />

a costly one, and their deaths do have meaning<br />

like those attributed to “friendly fire,” short shells<br />

and unintended deaths due faulty bombings.<br />

Why doesn’t Israel have more friends even<br />

though they have not offended many UN members?<br />

Why do we have so many enemies despite<br />

pouring quadrillions in foreign aid from post<br />

World War 11’s Marshall Plan to date? Why<br />

doesn’t Mr. Mitchel stop beating around the bush<br />

and stop blaming Israel for the ills of the Middle<br />

East and start blaming the real villains?<br />

Ed Krauss, Scarsdale, NY<br />

2018 Crompond Rd. (Rear) Yorktown Hts.<br />

Routes 35 & 202 -Crompond


Page 24 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

ED KOCH COMMENTARY<br />

It Is Time to Reexamine the Welfare Reform Law of 1996<br />

Continued from page 23<br />

Jason DeParle, pointed out the following: “Asked<br />

how they survived without cash aid, virtually all of<br />

the women interviewed here said they had sold<br />

food stamps, getting 50 cents for every dollar of<br />

groceries they let others buy with their benefit<br />

cards. Many turned to food banks and churches.<br />

Nationally, roughly a quarter have subsidized<br />

housing, with rents as low as $50 a month. Several<br />

women said the loss of aid had left them more<br />

dependent on troubled boyfriends. One woman<br />

said she sold her child’s Social Security number so<br />

a relative could collect a tax credit worth $3,000.<br />

‘I tried to sell blood, but they told me I was anemic,’<br />

she said. Several women acknowledged that<br />

they had resorted to shoplifting, including one<br />

who took orders for brand-name clothes and sold<br />

them for half-price. Asked how she got cash, one<br />

woman said flatly, ‘We rob wetbacks’ — illegal immigrants,<br />

who tend to carry cash and avoid the<br />

police. At least nine times, she said, she has flirted<br />

with men and led them toward her home, where<br />

accomplices robbed them. ‘I felt bad afterwards,’<br />

she said. But she added, ‘<strong>The</strong>re were times when<br />

we didn’t have nothing to eat.’”<br />

When the bill was signed into law by President<br />

Clinton in 1996, we were in a period of economic<br />

growth and jobs were available to many of<br />

those single mothers. But the demand we made<br />

on these poverty-stricken women beginning in<br />

2007 occurred shortly before the onset of the<br />

greatest recession in our economy since the Great<br />

Depression of the 1930s. Throwing those women<br />

and children off of welfare by virtue of the 5-year<br />

time limit put them into contention for jobs when<br />

millions of skilled and semi-skilled Americans in<br />

the middle class were being fired and unemployment<br />

climbed to over 9 percent. How could we<br />

expect these poverty-stricken women to successfully<br />

compete for the few jobs then available? Of<br />

course, some did, but most did not.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Times article pointed out “President<br />

Clinton said a year after signing the law, which he<br />

often cites in casting himself as a centrist, ‘Welfare<br />

reform works.’” <strong>The</strong> Times article then pointed out,<br />

“<strong>The</strong> recession that began in 2007 posed a new<br />

test to that claim. Even with $5 billion in new federal<br />

funds, caseloads rose just 15 percent from the<br />

lowest level in two generations. Compared with<br />

the 1990s peak, the national welfare rolls are still<br />

down by 68 percent. Just one in five poor children<br />

now receives cash aid, the lowest level in nearly 50<br />

years. As the downturn wreaked havoc on budgets,<br />

some states took new steps to keep the needy<br />

away. <strong>The</strong>y shortened time limits, tightened eligibility<br />

rules and reduced benefits (to an average of<br />

about $350 a month for a family of three).”<br />

I believe I am not and was not as Mayor of<br />

New York City a bleeding heart – I knew then<br />

and now that you cannot spend money that the<br />

city, state or federal government does not have for<br />

social programs that are needed without flirting<br />

with bankruptcy. But there is always the question<br />

of municipal priorities on what do you spend the<br />

monies government does have. <strong>The</strong> poor have always<br />

seemed to be last in line when decency and<br />

fairness should make them a priority.<br />

DeParle reports “Representative Paul D.<br />

Ryan of Wisconsin, the top House Republican on<br />

budget issues, calls the current welfare program ‘an<br />

unprecedented success.’ Mitt Romney, who leads<br />

the race for the Republican presidential nomination,<br />

has said he would place similar restrictions<br />

on ‘all these federal programs.’ One of his rivals,<br />

Rick Santorum, calls the welfare law a source of<br />

spiritual rejuvenation.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> Republicans were not alone in zeroing in<br />

on those in poverty. DeParle also reported, “President<br />

Obama spoke favorably of the program in<br />

his 2008 campaign — promoting his role as a<br />

state legislator in cutting the Illinois welfare rolls.<br />

But he has said little about it as president.”<br />

It is surely disturbing for all of us to learn,<br />

“While data on the very poor is limited and subject<br />

to challenge, recent studies have found that<br />

as many as one in every four low-income single<br />

mothers is jobless and without cash aid — roughly<br />

four million women and children. Many of the<br />

mothers have problems like addiction or depression,<br />

which can make assisting them politically<br />

unpopular, and they have received little attention<br />

in a downturn that has produced an outpouring<br />

of concern for the middle class.”<br />

Of this number, DeParle reports “researchers<br />

at the Urban Institute found that one in four lowincome<br />

single mothers nationwide — about 1.5<br />

million — are jobless and without cash aid. That<br />

is twice the rate the researchers found under the<br />

old welfare law. More than 40 percent remain that<br />

way for more than a year, and many have mental<br />

or physical disabilities, sick children or problems<br />

with domestic violence.”<br />

Currently, we are concerned with helping –<br />

and we are not doing a very good job at doing so<br />

– the unemployed middle class and those who are<br />

seeing their homes foreclosed. <strong>The</strong> Congress, like<br />

the American public, seems unconcerned about<br />

the poor who are sinking into deep poverty, which<br />

the Census Bureau defines “as living on less than<br />

half of the amount needed to escape poverty (for<br />

a family of three, that means living on less than<br />

$9,000 a year). About 10 percent of households<br />

headed by women report incomes that low…”<br />

During the Nixon years when Daniel Patrick<br />

Moynihan before becoming the senator<br />

from New York was a presidential adviser, Nixon<br />

proposed H.R. 1 which would have nationalized<br />

welfare with all states required to make the same<br />

base cash payment of $6,500, with the feds paying<br />

all increases required over and above what states<br />

were paying for the existing welfare program for<br />

women with dependent children. <strong>The</strong> left wing of<br />

the Democratic Party in Congress refused to support<br />

it, complaining it was too little. Moderates,<br />

like myself, did support it, and we lost. <strong>The</strong> left lost<br />

later when the new time-limited program was put<br />

into effect in 1996, and the poor women and children<br />

have since suffered enormously. Obviously,<br />

we should not go back to the earlier program,<br />

which encouraged fraud, abuse and too heavy a<br />

permanent reliance on government welfare. But<br />

simply applying an arbitrary time limit, irrespective<br />

of the needs of individual families – mothers<br />

and their children – doesn’t work. That is why it is<br />

time once again to look at the program.<br />

Continued on page 25


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 25<br />

ED KOCH COMMENTARY<br />

Continued from page 24<br />

Making the point of how we deal differently<br />

with the wealthy and protect them<br />

was brought home by another article in <strong>The</strong><br />

Times dated <strong>April</strong> 11 th , which discusses subsidies<br />

to wealthy farmers. <strong>The</strong> article by Ron<br />

Nixon <strong>read</strong>s in part, “<strong>The</strong> federal government<br />

could save about $1 billion a year by reducing<br />

the subsidies it pays to large farmers to<br />

cover much of the cost of their crop insurance,<br />

according to a report by Congressional<br />

auditors due to be released on Thursday. <strong>The</strong><br />

report raised the prospect of the government’s<br />

capping the amount that farmers receive<br />

at $40,000 a year, much as the government<br />

caps payments in other farm programs. Any<br />

move to limit the subsidy, however, is likely to<br />

be opposed by rural lawmakers, who say the<br />

program provides a safety net for agriculture.<br />

<strong>The</strong> report, by the Government Accountability<br />

Office, the investigative arm of Congress,<br />

was requested by Senator Tom Coburn, Republican<br />

of Oklahoma, as part of his efforts<br />

to cut government spending. Under the<br />

federal crop insurance program, farmers can<br />

buy insurance policies that cover poor yields,<br />

declines in prices or both. <strong>The</strong> insurance is<br />

obtained through private companies, but the<br />

federal government pays about 62 percent of<br />

the premiums, plus administrative expenses.<br />

<strong>The</strong> crop insurance subsidy, according to the<br />

G.A.O. report, ballooned to $7.3 billion last<br />

year from $951 million in 2000, or about $1.2<br />

billion adjusted for inflation. A Congressional<br />

Continued on page <strong>26</strong><br />

PLAY SOMETHING LLC Articles<br />

of Org. filed NY Sec.<br />

of State (SSNY) 9/<strong>26</strong>/11.<br />

Office in <strong>Westchester</strong> Co.<br />

SSNY design. Agent of LLC<br />

upon whom process may<br />

be served. SSNY shall mail<br />

copy <strong>The</strong> LLC C/O Roman<br />

Fichman, ESQ. 245 8th Ave.<br />

No. 249 New York, NY 10011.<br />

Purpose: Any lawful activity.<br />

CK 465 BUILDING, LLC Articles<br />

of Org. filed NY Sec.<br />

of State (SSNY) 4/2/12. Office<br />

in <strong>Westchester</strong> Co.<br />

SSNY design. Agent of LLC<br />

upon whom process may<br />

be served. SSNY shall mail<br />

copy David Kessler & Associates,<br />

L.L.C. 1373 Broad St.<br />

Clifton, NJ 07013. Purpose:<br />

Any lawful activity.<br />

80 METROPOLITAN AVE.<br />

UNIT 1R, LLC Articles of<br />

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whom process may be<br />

served. SSNY shall mail<br />

copy C/O Stern Keiser &<br />

Panken, LLP 1025 <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

Ave. Ste. 305 White<br />

Plains, NY 10604. Purpose:<br />

Any lawful activity. COM-<br />

PETITIVE ROOF SERVICES<br />

LLC Articles of Org. filed<br />

NY Sec. of State (SSNY)<br />

12/2/11. Office in <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

Co. SSNY design.<br />

Agent of LLC upon whom<br />

process may be served.<br />

SSNY shall mail copy 620<br />

Park Ave. Yonkers, NY<br />

10703. Purpose: Any lawful<br />

activity.<br />

POWERPLAY MANAGE-<br />

MENT COMPANY, LLC<br />

Authority filed with Secy.<br />

of State of NY (SSNY) on<br />

2/14/12. Office location:<br />

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formed in Delaware (DE) on<br />

1/20/05 SSNY designated<br />

as agent of LLC upon whom<br />

process against it may be<br />

served. SSNY shall mail<br />

process to Corporation<br />

Service Company 80 State<br />

ST Albany, NY 12207. DE<br />

address of LLC: 2711 Centerville<br />

RD STE 400 Wilmington,<br />

DE 19808. Arts. Of<br />

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State, PO Box 898 Dover, DE<br />

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activity.<br />

RAAS PARTNERS LLC Articles<br />

of Org. filed NY Sec.<br />

of State (SSNY) 1/27/12.<br />

Office in <strong>Westchester</strong> Co.<br />

SSNY design. Agent of LLC<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

upon whom process may<br />

be served. SSNY shall mail<br />

copy of C/O Nancy Brady<br />

125 Parkway Rd. Ste. 1303<br />

Bronxville, NY 10708. Purpose:<br />

Any lawful activity.<br />

TREMBLANT LLC Articles<br />

of Org. filed NY Sec. of<br />

State (SSNY) 2/22/12. Office<br />

in <strong>Westchester</strong> Co.<br />

SSNY design. Agent of LLC<br />

upon whom process may<br />

be served. SSNY shall mail<br />

copy of Patricia G. Micek,<br />

Esq. 2180 Boston Post Rd.<br />

Larchmont, NY 10538. Purpose:<br />

Any lawful activity.<br />

GEORGIO FAMILY III LLC<br />

Articles of Org. filed NY<br />

Sec. of State (SSNY)<br />

12/5/2011. Office in <strong>Westchester</strong><br />

Co. SSNY design.<br />

Agent of LLC upon whom<br />

process may be served.<br />

SSNY shall mail copy of<br />

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Micek, Esq. 2180 Boston<br />

Post Rd. Larchmont, NY<br />

10538. Purpose: Any lawful<br />

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SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE NEW YORK<br />

COUNTY OF WESTCHESTER<br />

NATIONAL CITYMORTGAGE, a division of NATIONAL CITY BANK,<br />

Plaintiff, Index No.: 3532/11<br />

against-<br />

SUMMONS<br />

THE DARTMOUTH PLAN, INC; KIEL BARNETT; LAWRENCE BARNETT;<br />

FLORINE BROWN; ALOYSIOUS BROWN: ANDREA MAXINE BROWN;<br />

ORENE BROWN; SHANNON NICOLE WILLIAMS; WENDELL WIL-<br />

LIAMS;<br />

Defendants.<br />

-------------------------------------------------------------X<br />

TO TT{R ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: THE DARTMOUTH PLAN<br />

INC.; KIEL BARNETT; LAWRENCE BARNETT; FLORINE BROWN;<br />

ALOYSIOUS GARRET BROWN; ANDREA MAXINE BROWN; ORENE<br />

BROWN; SHANNON NICOLE WILLIAMS; WENDELL<br />

YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in the above<br />

entitled action and to serve a copy of your Answer on: the plaintiff’s<br />

attorney within twenty (20) days after the service of this Summons,<br />

exclusive of the day of service, or within thirty (30) days after completion<br />

of service where service is made in any other manner than by<br />

personal delivery within the State. <strong>The</strong> United States of America,<br />

if designated as a defendant in this action, may answer or appear<br />

within sixty (60) days of service hereof. In case of your failure to appear<br />

or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the<br />

relief demanded in the Complaint.<br />

Plaintiff designates <strong>Westchester</strong> County as the place of trial. <strong>The</strong> basis<br />

of venue is the County in which the defendant resides and where<br />

the transaction took place.<br />

Dated; January 18 2011<br />

New York, New York<br />

THE HOPP LAW FIRM, LLC<br />

Attorneys for Plaintiff<br />

By:___________________<br />

Fred Van Remortel, Esq.<br />

Rashida Maples, Esq.<br />

1515 Broadway, 11th Floor<br />

New York, New York 10036<br />

Tele: (866) 470-5167


Page <strong>26</strong> THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

ED KOCH COMMENTARY<br />

It Is Time to Reexamine the Welfare Reform Law of 1996<br />

Continued from page 25<br />

Budget Office study cited in the report estimates<br />

that the premium subsidy will cost $39 billion from<br />

<strong>2012</strong> to 2016, about $7.8 billion a year. Unlike other<br />

farm programs that have income or payment limits,<br />

OP-ED<br />

By WENDY LONG<br />

As I’ve campaigned around New<br />

York state over the past two<br />

months, one thing has become<br />

clear: Whether they work on<br />

farms or in financial institutions,<br />

New Yorkers everywhere are being<br />

crushed by federal regulation.<br />

Exhibit A: the Dodd-Frank<br />

financial reform law. Far from putting Wall Street<br />

on a sounder footing, the law is hindering economic<br />

recovery. Unless Barack Obama is replaced by Mitt<br />

Romney and unless we fire regulation-giddy senators<br />

such as New York’s Kirsten Gillibrand, the U.S.<br />

will be unable to protect its position as the world<br />

leader in financial markets.<br />

No one denies that appropriate federal regulation<br />

can encourage innovation and healthier corporate<br />

behavior. But the answer to excess on Wall<br />

Street is not excess in Washington. Dodd-Frank<br />

micromanages and second-guesses businesses,<br />

while impairing the availability of credit that is vital<br />

to economic expansion. It is a full-employment act<br />

crop insurance payments have no such restrictions,<br />

so farmers can get millions in subsidies regardless<br />

of their income. <strong>The</strong> G.A.O. said a cap last year<br />

would have affected about 4 percent of farmers in<br />

the program, who accounted for about a third of the<br />

premium subsidies and were mostly associated with<br />

for bureaucrats, lawyers and consultants.<br />

At the top of the list for repeal is the Volcker<br />

Rule, which restricts banks’ proprietary trading—<br />

buying and selling stock and other assets for their<br />

own account over the short term—and hedgefund<br />

activities. <strong>The</strong>re is no evidence that proprietary<br />

trading had anything to do with the financial crisis.<br />

Beyond that, the rule is proving unworkable. No<br />

one, not even former Federal Reserve Chairman<br />

Paul Volcker himself, has been able to define the<br />

covered class of transactions with any degree of<br />

clarity or consistency. <strong>The</strong> uncertainty is pernicious<br />

because indeterminate limitations on banks’ activities<br />

mean less credit for small businesses and other<br />

borrowers.<br />

Second to go should be the so-called “Lincoln<br />

Amendment.” Snuck into Dodd-Frank in the<br />

middle of the night, it requires banks to outsource<br />

many transactions in derivatives (contracts based on<br />

the value of another underlying asset) to affiliates,<br />

even though banks have been buying and selling<br />

derivatives for years with no impact on soundness.<br />

This requirement will divert capital from wellcapitalized<br />

banks to new, unnecessary entities, and<br />

large farms.”<br />

Where is America’s humanity? How can we see<br />

women and children degraded this way? We cannot<br />

continue to avert our gaze and fail to respond to their<br />

needs. Responsible people shocked by the fraud and<br />

outrages that marred the old system of welfare went<br />

overboard – me among them – in seeking to eliminate<br />

the abuses. It is time we examine the subject<br />

Financial Regulation is Hurting New York<br />

<strong>The</strong> State Deserves a Senator Committed to Preserving Its Leadership in World Markets<br />

NEW YORK CIVIC<br />

Reformers Try Again<br />

By HENRY J. STERN<br />

Now that Governor Cuomo is in<br />

midst of the second year of his first<br />

term, people are pointing to his success<br />

as a manager and as an executive.<br />

His popularity rating is 68% (according<br />

to the latest Quinnipiac poll) and<br />

while there are certainly disputes over<br />

specific measures he proposes to eliminate the perennial<br />

state debt, one would have to say that he is<br />

well-poised to make the effort.<br />

<strong>The</strong> next challenge Cuomo tackles should be<br />

campaign finance reform. A new coalition of business,<br />

civic, and philanthropic leaders called New<br />

York Leadership for Accountable Government<br />

(NY Lead) has formed in response to a line uttered<br />

by Cuomo in his State of the State address this year<br />

expressing his desire to enact campaign finance<br />

reform on the statewide level. <strong>The</strong> group, whose<br />

members include David Rockefeller, restaurateur<br />

Danny Meyer, and Facebook co-founder Chris<br />

Hughes, was described in <strong>The</strong> New York Times<br />

last week in an article entitled “Wealthy Group<br />

Seeks to Reform Election Giving.”<br />

In the article, Frederick A. O. Schwarz Jr., chief<br />

counsel at<br />

the Brennan Center for Justice, one of the organizations<br />

that helped put together the NY Lead<br />

coalition, says, “It’s a double victory. You have lower<br />

amounts of money that can be given, and No. 2,<br />

ordinary people become engaged in political campaigns<br />

and candidates change their approach to<br />

campaigning.”<br />

While no bill has yet been submitted in Albany,<br />

it appears likely that the proposed statewide<br />

campaign finance system would be modeled on<br />

New York City’s Campaign Finance Board. While<br />

the CFB system has deficiencies, the advantage of<br />

mirroring the city’s approach is that it is well-tested<br />

and one that is al<strong>read</strong>y familiar to a large portion of<br />

the legislature’s members, many of whom have run<br />

for office using matching funds.<br />

Governor Cuomo’s strong words in favor of<br />

campaign finance reform are a comfort to the civic<br />

warriors who were so recently defeated on redistricting.<br />

<strong>The</strong> legislative leaders in March refused to<br />

honor the pledges made, oral and written, to Mayor<br />

Koch and New York Uprising.<br />

Like independent redistricting, campaign finance<br />

reform is a worthy effort. If the legislature<br />

may drive business offshore. <strong>The</strong> House Financial<br />

Services Committee has al<strong>read</strong>y passed a reform<br />

measure by Rep. Nan Hayworth (R., N.Y.) that<br />

would repeal most of the amendment, but there’s<br />

been no action so far in the Senate.<br />

And then there’s the Consumer Financial<br />

Protection Bureau (CFPB), the new monster<br />

agency set to commandeer 10% of the Federal<br />

Reserve budget. It is also the least accountable of<br />

federal agencies, structured so neither Congress nor<br />

senior executive branch officials exercise any real<br />

control over its activities, making it constitutionally<br />

suspect.<br />

<strong>The</strong> CFPB’s entire ethos is to channel more of<br />

bankers’ time and resources into satisfying bureaucrats<br />

and their paperwork requirements. Analysts<br />

expect that medium-size banks will have to merge<br />

in order to better face this superagency, which<br />

means less consumer choice, not more consumer<br />

protection. <strong>The</strong> CFPB should be eliminated before<br />

its damage cannot be undone.<br />

Fourth on the chopping block should be<br />

Dodd-Frank’s “Title VII,” which mandates the<br />

creation of new, heavily regulated trading venues<br />

blocks his proposals, it<br />

only shows how they<br />

belong to their donors.<br />

Cuomo is in a no-lose<br />

situation. If he prevails in his efforts to reform campaign<br />

finance and to provide public spending for<br />

statewide campaigns he will be regarded as herculean<br />

for cleaning the Augean stables. If he fails, he<br />

will be praised for having tried to grab the Cretan<br />

bull by the horns (another one of the twelve labors).<br />

One of Andrew Cuomo’s gifts is his ability to<br />

achieve successful political results without the appearance<br />

of having degraded himself or incurring<br />

major obligations to other politicians in exchange<br />

for their support. <strong>The</strong> legislature largely has been<br />

forced so far to swallow this.<br />

<strong>The</strong> next few months, <strong>April</strong> to June, will give<br />

time for the reform proposals to be considered by<br />

the legislature. Even though the Republicans’ paper-thin<br />

majority in the State Senate is artificially<br />

augmented by a small conference of independent<br />

Democrats who are not beholden to their party<br />

leaders, the Republicans are under no obligation to<br />

reform anything, at least until 2022 when redistricting<br />

will beckon again.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Democrats, whose self-interests also lie in<br />

maintaining the status quo, deserve equal suspicion<br />

in regard to their sincerity in addressing this issue. It<br />

<strong>The</strong> Rich Become Reformers by Seeking<br />

Restrictions on Campaign Financing<br />

again and seek a just solution.<br />

Mr. President, you must speak for the poor. No<br />

one else seems willing, or effective.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Honorable Edward Irving Koch served as a member<br />

of member of Congress from New York State from 1969<br />

through 1977, and New York City as its 105 th Mayor<br />

from 1978 to 1989.<br />

for over-the-counter derivatives. Because derivatives<br />

enable parties to manage risks by making and<br />

balancing contracts for assets at future prices, they<br />

are literally the lifeblood of the modern economy.<br />

Title VII will increase transaction costs for derivatives,<br />

impair liquidity, and push derivative trading to<br />

Asian markets.<br />

True regulatory reform means reforming the<br />

regulators. Dodd-Frank shows the morass that is<br />

created when multiple agencies are tasked with<br />

implementing complex legislation. We need one<br />

business-conduct regulator—not the clashing<br />

Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity<br />

Futures Trading Commission—that can<br />

focus on catching the next Bernie Madoff and<br />

MF Global, instead of engaging in turf battles and<br />

penny-ante enforcement.<br />

Does anyone believe we need four primary<br />

federal bank regulatory agencies? A single regulator<br />

can focus on safety and soundness. And the Federal<br />

Reserve can focus on systemically significant<br />

institutions.<br />

Repeal of Dodd-Frank’s most damaging requirements<br />

should be at the top of any pro-growth,<br />

job-creation agenda.<br />

Ms. Long, a Republican, is a lawyer who has practiced<br />

commercial litigation. She is a candidate for the U.S.<br />

Senate in New York.<br />

is in the interest of good government and fostering<br />

legitimate competition both between and within<br />

the political parties that incumbents be contested<br />

by credible candidates who will give voters the opportunity<br />

to make choices that they have so long<br />

been denied.<br />

When Cuomo tries to influence the political<br />

hacks of both parties, he is clearly acting in the public<br />

interest. Of course, it is also true that Governor<br />

Cuomo did not follow through on his oft-repeated<br />

promise to veto the lines which he did not find satisfactory.<br />

<strong>The</strong> basic tilt of the legislature at this time is<br />

toward moderation and common sense. <strong>The</strong> difficulty<br />

is achieving that result without pretending to<br />

yield to every pressure group that arrives in Albany<br />

with more than a dozen members.<br />

One fascinating aspect of Albany politics is the<br />

widesp<strong>read</strong> practice of people publicly supporting<br />

policies, which they personally believe are ruinous<br />

and unsupportable. We would compare it to trying<br />

to solve a crosswords puzzle in which the answer to<br />

each clue is an antonym.<br />

One response is that they deserve it. Our response<br />

to that is that the legislature may deserve it,<br />

but do we?<br />

Henry J. Stern is the founder and president of New York<br />

Civic (www.NYCivic.org).


THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Page 27<br />

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Page 28 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN THURSDAY APRIL <strong>26</strong>, <strong>2012</strong><br />

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Nordic Dreams<br />

12 nights, Aug 31 - Sep 12, <strong>2012</strong><br />

Five-Star Marina | Offer #1200546<br />

EXCLUSIVE<br />

FREE Gratuities<br />

& $ 450 onboard<br />

credit*<br />

EXCLUSIVE<br />

FREE Gratuities<br />

& $ 500 onboard<br />

credit*<br />

EXCLUSIVE<br />

FREE Gratuities<br />

& $ 550 onboard<br />

credit*<br />

$<br />

3,000 off 2-for-1 fares & FREE air* $<br />

2,000 off 2-for-1 fares & FREE air* $<br />

2,000 off 2-for-1 fares & FREE air*<br />

B4 - Veranda<br />

Stateroom<br />

A4 - Concierge<br />

Veranda<br />

PH3 - Penthouse<br />

Suite<br />

1st guest Was $ 11,874 1st guest Was $ 12,874 1st guest Was $ 15,474<br />

Now $ 8,874 Now $ 9,874 Now $ 12,474<br />

2nd guest FREE 2nd guest FREE 2nd guest FREE<br />

B4 - Veranda<br />

Stateroom<br />

A4 - Concierge<br />

Veranda<br />

PH3 - Penthouse<br />

Suite<br />

1st guest Was $ 11,804 1st guest Was $ 12,804 1st guest Was $ 15,404<br />

Now $ 9,804 Now $ 10,804 Now $ 13,404<br />

2nd guest FREE 2nd guest FREE 2nd guest FREE<br />

B4 - Veranda<br />

Stateroom<br />

A4 - Concierge<br />

Veranda<br />

PH3 - Penthouse<br />

Suite<br />

1st guest Was $ 14,066 1st guest Was $ 15,066 1st guest Was $ 17,666<br />

Now $ 12,066 Now $ 13,066 Now $ 15,666<br />

2nd guest FREE 2nd guest FREE 2nd guest FREE<br />

POINTS OF DIST INCTION • Elegant mid-size ships featuring large-ship amenities • Free and unlimited soft drinks and bottled water througout the ship<br />

Country club-casual ambiance; tuxedos & gowns are never required • Finest cuisine at sea, served in up to six open-seating restaurants; all at no additional charge<br />

Gourmet culinary program created by world-renowned Master Chef Jacques Pépin • Canyon Ranch SpaClub® • Best value in luxury cruising<br />

Graybar Building - New York<br />

420 Lexington Ave, Suite 1603<br />

pisabrothers.com<br />

800.729.7472<br />

mgr@pisabrothers.com<br />

*Offers expire May 31, <strong>2012</strong>. All advertised fares, offers and any applicable shipboard credits or special amenities shown are per person based on double occupancy, are subject to availability at time of booking, may not be combinable with other offers, are capacity controlled and may be withdrawn without prior notice or remain in<br />

effect after the expiration date. All fares listed are in U.S. dollars, per person, based on double occupancy and include Non-Commissionable Fares. Cruise-related government fees and taxes of up to $19.50 per guest per day are included. Cruise Ship Fuel Surcharge may apply for new bookings and, if applicable, is additional revenue<br />

to Oceania Cruises. 2 for 1 fares are based on published Full Brochure Fares. Full Brochure Fares may not have resulted in actual sales in all cabin categories, may not have been in effect during the last 90 days and do not include Personal Charges and Optional Facilities and Services Fees as defined in the Terms and Conditions of the<br />

Guest Ticket Contract which may be viewed at OceaniaCruises.com. Full Brochure Fares are cruise only. “Free Airfare” promotion does not include ground transfers and applies to economy, round-trip flights only from BOS, EWR, JFK, PHL and select other Air Gateways. Any advertised fares that include the “Free Airfare” promotion<br />

include airline fees, surcharges and government taxes. Some airline-imposed personal charges, including but not limited to baggage, priority boarding and special seating, may apply. For details visit exploreflightfees.com. Oceania Cruises reserves the right to change any and all fares, fees and surcharges at any time. Additional terms<br />

and conditions may apply. Complete Terms and Conditions may be found in the Guest Ticket Contract. Ships’ Registry: Marshall Islands. Pisa Brothers Travel strongly recommends the purchase of travel insurance. We reserve the right to correct errors or omissions. For complete terms and conditions contact Pisa Brothers Travel.<br />

WWW.WESTCHESTERGUARDIAN.COM

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